Mac OS X 'Leopard'-related Discussion


Recommended Posts

Nope, Spring is when we'll get Leopard.

Considering Summer doesn't officially start until a few weeks into June normally, there's always the possibility that it comes in June along with the iPhone. "Spring" is by no means some type of exact, specific date.

Considering Summer doesn't officially start until a few weeks into June normally, there's always the possibility that it comes in June along with the iPhone. "Spring" is by no means some type of exact, specific date.

march-april is more realistic

The thing that annoys me the most is that none of us have a clue of how Mac OS X Leopard is really progressing. What we've seen so far isn't really that impressive (IMO), I don't know what to think of it's interface and currently Mac OS X Leopard has an extensive laundry list of "know issues". Less than two months to fully test the additional mayor features and possibly a new interface could proof itself to be difficult.

We have just gotten an anonymous tip from a source that indicates that Apple is planning a special event on February 20 to introduce Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard), iLife ?07 and iWork ?07 as well as updated Mac Pros. Mac Pros will be available immediately with a free upgrade to 10.5 when it ships, and the ship date for 10.5 will be confirmed for 3/24/07 as we have been predicting for quite some time now.

http://www.macrumors.com/2007/01/23/apple-...-february-20th/

Well but if they're on track to release Leopard in Spring (maybe April), and they're planning to show it off on February 20th, and remember the big IF, we all have a couple of months to see and test how the new interface will look like (if a new interface will ever exists.... :( ).

One thing I'm sure, those so long rumored "secret things" Steve Jobs talked about last year at WWDC should be really big, or he would never mention anything like that in such a big event like WWDC...

Considering Summer doesn't officially start until a few weeks into June normally, there's always the possibility that it comes in June along with the iPhone. "Spring" is by no means some type of exact, specific date.
Well, as of Apple's Q1 financial results, Spring is still the official word from Apple.

Some shots from the latest Mac OS X Leopard build:

http://flickr.com/photos/tobias-digital/se...57594495430436/

Not much, but the Arabesque screensaver looks kinda cool and there seem to be four more.

When it comes to the Terminal icon I hope it's just a "beta easter-egg", similar to the monkey splash screen some Photoshop betas have. :p

The "Open" dialog seems to feature a new "Media" section:

3668088686d4e831af0o5wh.png\

Not sure what it does. :/

Edited by .Neo

I am not absolutely pumped for Leopard. I think it will be pretty cool, but at this point I still have Tiger to figure out. I am anew switcher so... I did, however see Macworld last year (on vid) and I thought the time machine feature was pretty cool. My question is though, if you deleted a file and used time machine, where does it get the file from? I know all about how you can retrieve things from the disk even after deleted but if it was far enough back and you had re-written a bunch of times since... I wouldn't want to have that feature take up more HDD.

As well, that raises questions like should I wait to buy my macbook? (I wasn't gonna because I could always pay the 150 w/e to get the new OS) and also is 80 gigs enough?

Time Machine requires an external HDD. Unfortunately Steve didn't make that clear enough =/

The Media Browser in the Open Dialogue looks interesting. But you shouldn't really need it if you leave all your media in the appropriate folders. Seems Expos? can now be found in the Applications folder as an actual app. I wanna know what is in that icon drop down menu.

I don't know what to think of it's interface and currently Mac OS X Leopard has an extensive laundry list of "know issues". Less than two months to fully test the additional mayor features and possibly a new interface could proof itself to be difficult.

You are assuming that the builds made public are current. For all we know they are months old vs what Apple is doing in-house.

You are assuming that the builds made public are current. For all we know they are months old vs what Apple is doing in-house.

What I meant was that keeping everything secret to the very last moment can have negative consequences for the development of all sorts of applications, especially the mayor suites like Microsoft Office.

Seems Expos? can now be found in the Applications folder as an actual app. I wanna know what is in that icon drop down menu.

It's nothing more than a script bringing up Expos? so you can add it to the Dock. The real stuff that actually handles everything is still part of Dock.app. Same goes for the Spotlight, Spaces and Time Machine (part of the Finder) .app files in the Applications folder.

It's nothing more than a script bringing up Expos? so you can add it to the Dock. The real stuff that actually handles everything is still part of Dock.app. Same goes for the Spotlight, Spaces and Time Machine (part of the Finder) .app files in the Applications folder.

Ah ok. Don't know why you'd need Spotlight in the dock.

I can see Time Machine being a useful one but does it have its own shortcut key?

Why, because you need to restore files every ten minutes? :p I believe you can set it to one of the "F" keys. Not entirely sure tho. You can set Spaces for sure (F8 by default in the last beta I used).

It would be nice if Apple released some new Apple Keyboards with corresponding icons to Expos?, Spaces etc. next to the "F" designation. Like the MacBook Pros have it.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • You can enable the Nova redesign in Firefox 152, under about:config
    • As long as Manifest v2 extensions keep working. I always enable compact mode from about:config. I hope I won't have to switch to LibreWolf or WaterFox anytime soon.
    • Threads scales past half a billion users, brings deeper community and feed controls by Fiza Ali Meta has announced Threads crossing a major milestone of 500 million monthly active users. And, at the heart of this growth sits something simple: communities. From books to basketball, parenting to music, Threads says its rise has been powered by people clustering around shared interests and, in turn, giving the platform its identity. In response, the platform is expanding its Communities feature beyond beta and introducing a set of new tools designed to make participation easier and more engaging. A redesigned Communities Hub will now appear in the main navigation menu, allowing users to jump between groups without leaving their feed. Each community will also receive a distinct Community Icon, giving them clearer visual identity and making them easier to recognise across the platform. Then there’s Community Progress, which is a kind of live gauge showing how close a topic is to becoming a full-fledged community, alongside guidance on how users can contribute to its development. In addition, Meta is also expanding its Community Champions programme, recognising more users who actively contribute to community engagement. And then things go more local; Local Communities is already available in 100 countries, including North America, South America, Asia, and Europe but are now rolling out with native-language tags starting in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. The platform is also expanding Live Chats to more communities in the coming weeks, adding features such as co-hosting and the ability to quote moments directly into users’ feeds. Beyond communities, Meta is tightening the loop between users and their feeds. Earlier this year came "Dear Algo," a feature that lets people tell Threads what they want more or less of. Now it’s being paired with a new tool, "Your Algo." It allows people to adjust how frequently certain topics appear, with options lasting one, three, or seven days. Meta says these preferences remain private and can be managed alongside “Dear Algo” in a unified settings hub. The rollout begins in the US, Canada, UK, Australia, and New Zealand. Finally, the company says these changes are part of an ongoing effort to refine Threads based on user feedback and that further updates will continue as the platform evolves.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      520
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      89
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!