Gizmodo posts complete guide to Apple’s Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
Though you might mistake Snow Leopard for plain old Leopard when you first boot it up…
Apple Day – Apple, iPod, iPad, iPhone, iTouch, iMac, iBook
Apple Day – Apple, iPod, iPad, iPhone, iTouch, iMac, iBook
Though you might mistake Snow Leopard for plain old Leopard when you first boot it up…
Though you might mistake Snow Leopard for plain old Leopard when you first boot it up, there’s a lot of subtle stuff happening on screen and under the hood. Here’s our guide to everything new in the latest Mac OS.
With every new version of Mac OS X, Apple adds features that replicate, fully or partially, the functionality of some third-party software. Dan Frakes takes a look at past Gems you may no longer need after upgrading, as well as areas where Snow Leopard still falls short. More: continued here
Though you might mistake Snow Leopard for plain old Leopard when you first boot it up, there’s a lot of subtle stuff happening on screen and under the hood. Here’s our guide to everything new in the latest Mac OS. More: continued here
All the icons for folders and apps in Snow Leopard are now drawn in glorious…
Apple’s support for OpenGL and its introduction of OpenCL as the new standard in GPGPU computing…
Just six days after the release of Mac OS X Snow Leopard to the general public…
Apple has released Java for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 5 which delivers improved reliability…
Snow Leopard is fast. It really is. Benchmarks can’t really show this…
Junk mail can get in the way of dealing with the real work in your inbox. This video tip shows you how to set up junk mail filtering preferences in Mac OS X Mail that will flag what is junk and exempt what isn’t, keeping you and your inbox better focused.
Release date: Thu, 27 Aug 2009 17:25:00 GMT
Mac OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard has landed. This time around, Apple goes light on the glitz in favor of some heavy work under the hood. John Siracusa dives deep into Apple’s new OS offering to see what’s new, what’s still the same, and whether it’s worth upgrading. More: continued here
Mac OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard has landed. This time around, Apple goes light on the glitz in favor of some heavy work under the hood. John Siracusa dives deep into Apple’s new OS offering to see what’s new, what’s still the same, and whether it’s worth upgrading.
This one caught us by surprise, but it comes from a source that has always been 100% reliable: Not only Apple may be working on a 10-inch tablet, but also in 13′ and 15′ models, one running Mac OS X.
In a comprehensive Snow Leopard review, Michael Gartenberg (slashgear.com) writes: “Apple has evolved the OS in ways that change core infrastructure while preserving and refining the experience that has differentiated the platform over the years. The result is an elegant, modern OS with some new features that help it retain the status of best of breed in personal computing.”