Mac OS X 'Leopard'-related Discussion


Recommended Posts

If the Dock didn't create a reflection for the icons, then old icons would look perfectly fine. The three prime examples being:

picture42fc5d.pngpicture6a24e6.png

Transmit

picture5fd494.pngkeynoteadd2f.png

Keynote

picture338289.pngtrashbd8ee.png

Trash

These all look fine on the 3D Dock until that reflection is added.

When you are right you are right, but leave it to them not to see the obvious. They say Microsoft went overboard with Aero, Apple went overboard with reflections (coverflow included)

Coverflow perhaps the only one which really shows that Apple are not completely heartless. Instead of just ripping it off they decided to employee the guy that made it. Yeah I'm happy for him but what about the other developers?

Why should Apple (or any other company) purchase software that they could re-created better or cheaper by themselves?

Maybe im being too much of a sensationalist but has anyone else noticed the serious lack of quality thats going into Apple designs recently?

Prime Examples:

Leopard's Dock (making something already pretty cluttered..even more cluttered looking)

The "Plastic" Theme in general (wtf was wrong with 2nd revision Aqua anyway?)

iPod Nano 3g (aka Biggie Smalls)

i probably could cite more (like the iphone headphone jack/ipod 6g video output restrictions) but im just talking about aesthetics right now.

Apple is supposed to make stuff that looks good, works good, and ultimately makes you feel "comfortable" and the leopard interface changes are making customizablity worse (in some cases) and making the entire system define apple's Form over Function binge (if only the form was good enough to make up for the limited of function..)

anyway sorry for the rant but i needed to say it

Edit: spelling

I disagree, I think Leopard looks very nice, and the Dock is only as cluttered as you make it. On Tiger, my Dock has five permanent icons, everything else is quickly launched with QuickSilver.

And the 3G nano is quite beautiful, you need to see it up close to appreciate it.

Why should Apple (or any other company) purchase software that they could re-created better or cheaper by themselves?

It's unethical to call someone else's idea and product a feature of your own operating system. Why should I pay for Leopard to get features I already have and a GUI I can already recreate?

I wanted to see some compelling features not what we have received. Tiger from Panther was a great step up. The features it had like Spotlight were a big thing. Core Image was huge. I feel that Leopard doesn't offer a big enough step over Tiger to warrant a purchase when some of its biggest features are already available for Free from 3rd party developers.

But as I said above this is a very small part of my issue with Leopard. The majority of my problems with it come from the very poor design choices. The layout is good but the icons, interface colours, the menu bar, the dock and even the folders are very poor and look like something you would see on to be honest an Open Source Linux project that has just made some concept imagery for people to salivate over without actually thinking about the usage.

I do see some elements of what Vice is saying. You certainly can't look at a current Leopard desktop and not draw comparisons with Vista. Its perhaps more ironic for Apple to do that given that they've lambasted Microsoft for doing that to them for years.

I can't really say at this point whether i'll like Leopard. They do seem to have gone a bit nuts on the reflections etc but they're all minor GUI tweaks.. frankly i'm only interested in knowing how well the system runs, how functional it is, how well it all works.. i'm slowly finding myself using Windows less and less now that i've finally got a powerful enough Macintosh and i'm enjoying it and if Leopard helps smooth that transition even further then great.

There are some killer features and for me Time Machine is something you'd consider paying like $50 for.. so the the new, refreshed OS is easily worth an additional $79 on top of that.. I still see OSX as one of the best value operating systems on the market. If I could buy a Linux distro with the finish and polish of OSX, i'd pay $129 for it. As it is, there simply is not one out there. And this isn't intended as a dig at Linux as i've been using it now for 10 years.. I love it and I love how far it has come, but it just doesn't have the feel and ease of use that OSX does obviously.

I think the vastly improved Finder in Leopard alone may warrant a purchase. Yes, there are alternatives like Path Finder, but nothing beats having a powerful Finder built in. And even Path Finder doesn't work as seamlessly as the new Finder does when it comes to browsing local computers on your network. Unlike in Tiger, networked computers literally appear in Finder as if they were local external hard drives.

I do see some elements of what Vice is saying. You certainly can't look at a current Leopard desktop and not draw comparisons with Vista. Its perhaps more ironic for Apple to do that given that they've lambasted Microsoft for doing that to them for years.

I can't really say at this point whether i'll like Leopard. They do seem to have gone a bit nuts on the reflections etc but they're all minor GUI tweaks.. frankly i'm only interested in knowing how well the system runs, how functional it is, how well it all works.. i'm slowly finding myself using Windows less and less now that i've finally got a powerful enough Macintosh and i'm enjoying it and if Leopard helps smooth that transition even further then great.

There are some killer features and for me Time Machine is something you'd consider paying like $50 for.. so the the new, refreshed OS is easily worth an additional $79 on top of that.. I still see OSX as one of the best value operating systems on the market. If I could buy a Linux distro with the finish and polish of OSX, i'd pay $129 for it. As it is, there simply is not one out there. And this isn't intended as a dig at Linux as i've been using it now for 10 years.. I love it and I love how far it has come, but it just doesn't have the feel and ease of use that OSX does obviously.

You raise some really great points there. Mac OS X is good value for money when you consider the overall package. If your moving from another OS to Leopard that's great. I just cant see myself personally moving from Tiger to Leopard. If I was on Panther or Jaguar sure. Or even had a very old PPC Mac (G4 or lower Desktop or a G3 or lower Laptop) I would consider buying a new Mac after Leopard was released. I have to admit if Leopard runs a lot better then Tiger (For instance I know it has Dual Core optimisations for the first time it scales to more then 4 processors efficiently) then I'll simply have to switch as I have a Dual Core laptop and if the GUI is more responsive (Which I would really welcome) then maybe I can put the rest of my gripes behind.

And yes I agree $125 USD is a great price for Mac OS X especially compared to Windows Ultimate which is like 3x that price and in my opinion comes with the same if not less of a feature set. (Although I say the same about Vista to Tiger).

Well I will be buying it regardless. I've wanted a Mac for years and now i've got one I wanna actually enjoy paying for an OS upgrade, and be one of the people queueing at my closest Apple store on release day to see if I can score some freebies ;)

Totally underastand where you're coming from though. Its certainly not like Tiger is a bad system to be basing your upgrade decisions from.. Leopard is a pretty hard sell for someone already happy with their Tiger setup. But if you are, as you say, coming from a few versions back or from outside Mac ownership all together, it is a mighty tempting prospect.

I think the vastly improved Finder in Leopard alone may warrant a purchase. Yes, there are alternatives like Path Finder, but nothing beats having a powerful Finder built in. And even Path Finder doesn't work as seamlessly as the new Finder does when it comes to browsing local computers on your network. Unlike in Tiger, networked computers literally appear in Finder as if they were local external hard drives.

I have a feeling that the Finder isn't much improved. I think it will still beach ball of death every so often and is still relatively non-functional compared to Path Finder (which is too big and bloated). I was hoping Apple would make a happy medium between the two. There's at least a few components I'd like to see fixed in the Finder.

IMO, one of the desktops that I see as having the most potential but falls abit on execution is Enlightenment DR17. I think there are some components there that Apple could use. Heck, I was trying it out on my only PC ... PII 300 and a 32 MB ATI card and it flies! If only my iMac G5 could do as much with 3 times the resources ....!

Overall, there's enough in Leopard to have me upgrade to the new OS - it'll make for a nice MP3 server. I'll put it next to my stereo system. I'm not sure about hardware. I'm waiting to see if they're still willing to release a cheaper Mac Pro ... or if I make enough $$$ in the next 6 months to budget for a Mac Pro.

Also about Apple locking down stuff in the OS. It's my opinion that they shouldn't be locking down anything. Anything in the OS can be used incorrectly to create an unstable environment if your going to sell me Milk let me see the Cow it came from.

In that case use Linux. Apple offers an OS that is secure and can't be compromised by any random 3rd party application that likes to use system frameworks beyond their original purpose.

Like I said earlier Mac OS X Leopard will have enough public frameworks that can be used for advanced animations for user interfaces without hacking into critical system processes.

If the Dock didn't create a reflection for the icons, then old icons would look perfectly fine. The three prime examples being:

picture42fc5d.pngpicture6a24e6.png

Transmit

picture5fd494.pngkeynoteadd2f.png

Keynote

picture338289.pngtrashbd8ee.png

Trash

These all look fine on the 3D Dock until that reflection is added.

ahh - now that you've pointed that out, thats really annoying. Do you think they will be changing that?? surely they can't leave it like that??

im starting to get the feeling it will be like vista and will end up being a "work in progress"

I honestly can't be too bothered about the Dock reflection. Overal the Finder and applications look great and polished.

^ but usually apple has been known for detail and thats what makes it a great looking product. Paying attention to detail.

And they did. Basically every icon has updated 16x16, 32x32, 256x256 and 512x512 pixel states where they paid great attention to detail. Basically all applications have been redesigned to share the same Unified look and window layout. The overal UI is much more polished and consistant than Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger has been the past 2,5 years.

The Leopard UI is more consistent, but not more polished, it looks far "cheaper" than Tiger did. Now Neo will most definitely disagree with me and some others will too, but comparing them side by side you will notice the difference in quality. Granted its not a train wreck or anything, but it definitely shows someone different is working on its GUI this time around. As for the statement regarding it being like Vista, thats a bit much, Leopard will be a prime OS as far as functionality and programs go, its GUI will be the work in progress imo. I like the direction they are going but they didn't quite make it yet and it certainly shows. Only downside is Apple has never really updated the theme of a Mac OS release, so don't count on it changing much until 10.6, but its very obvious whoever is doing the new work isn't as critical for every fine detail as the previous designer was. Pixel perfectionists will be upset by this, but the average person won't. I just hope they finish the resolution independence as that was one feature I was really looking forward to.

Btw the new nano is quite nice in person, in pictures especially dead on, it looks terrible, like a big crappy photoshop bevel, in your hand its quite different.

And simxx17, welcome to the team in October, I'm picking myself up a nice fully loaded 24" iMac once Leopard is released. Coming from Windows your going to love the Mac OS, best OS I've ever used, Linux might be more advanced (as they would say) but Mac OS is far far more user friendly. Just remember to make your "shortname" with capitals as you can't change it (easily), and you see it in every finder window, just a little pet peeve of mine.

i dont know about resolution independence coming in a patch update... its not very often a 10.x.x update brings features in..

that being said i dont use the resolution independence features of vista so i dont really care but just my feeling is that this feature might not be coming

vista doesn't have resolution independent features as far as i know, and i auto-hide my dock and rarely use it so im not really muffed with it ... using spotlight to launch apps is easy, so the dock has been kinda useless for me since 10.4

will i upgrade to leopard? heck yes ... at least we don't have a vista on our hands. if anything is left 'unpolished' its probably because of the time it took to make os x resolution independent.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Creative Sound Blaster AE-X PCIe review: your headphones will love it by Steven Parker If you have been reading Neowin for any length of time, you may remember that I reviewed the Sound Blaster Audigy FX Pro back in April. I found it to be an excellent budget sound card, even though it lacked support for formats such as DTS over the included SPDIF port. Anyway, Creative reached out to me again asking if I was interested in reviewing the Sound Blaster AE-X. It is a card mainly targeted at headphone wearers, which I'll get into a bit later. Before we get underway, here is a disclaimer: Creative Labs provided a free sample without any review pre-approval. Here are the full specs of it: Creative Sound Blaster AE-X Dimensions: 179 x 126 x 18 mm Weight: 263g / 9.28 oz Platform: PCI-e DAC: ESS ES9039Q2M Connectivity Options Side: Rear: 1 x HD Audio Front Panel Connector, 1 x ⅛“ Headphone port, 1 x RCA Line-out (Left) port, 1 x RCA Line-out (Right) port, 1 x Coaxial SPDIF-out port, 1 x ⅛“ Mic in/Line-in port, 1 x TOSLINK SPDIF-in port Surround: No DNR / SNR: THD+N: 0.0001% Dynamic Range 130 dB Recording Resolution: PCM up to 32-bit / 192kHz (Stereo) Direct Mode: Line Out (Stereo): PCM up to 32-bit  384 kHz Coaxial SPDIF Out: PCM up to 24-bit 192.0 kHz Headphone Amp: PCM up to 32-bit / 384kHz (Stereo) Native DSD: DSD64, DSD128, DSD256 Output Impedance: 1Ω, Supported Headphone Impedance: 8–600Ω, IEM: 0.5Vrms, Low: 1.5Vrms, Mid: 3Vrms, High: 6Vrms, Maximum output power: 350mW @ 32Ω (High), Maximum output voltage: 6Vrms (High) Front Panel Headphone Amp: PCM up to 32-bit / 192kHz (Stereo) Native DSD: DSD64, DSD128 Output Impedance: 10Ω, Supported Headphone Impedance: 32–300Ω, Maximum output power: 40mW @ 32Ω, Maximum output voltage: 1.9Vrms ASIO: ASIO 2.3 Total Harmonic Distortion: THD+N: 0.0006% Dynamic Range: 114 dB Scout Mode: Yes EMI shielding: No (but it passed all the FCC emission tests) Operating temperature: 0–45°C Input Power: 12V⎓0.5A Warranty: 1 Year (MSRP) Price: $179.99 / £169.99 The Sound Blaster AE-X was announced at the end of May, and it becomes clear that it is mainly for headphone wearers. I should also note that the card does not support DDL/DTS encoding technology, but it is said to support decoding through the coaxial SPDIF port. I was able to test this working with the classic Windows Sound properties, but I could not get a DTS (decode) signal through my Logitech Z906, it defaulted to 3D sound whenever I played DTS content through Plex or Emby. In addition, this card only supports two channels (stereo) over the speakers. The surround support is limited to the Headphone Amp, so before I get underway, what we have here is a card mostly intended for headphone use, especially with its SPDIF In (Toslink) port where you could connect another device like a console. So what about the highlights of this card? The AE-X is powered by the ESS SABRE DAC (ES9039Q2M), which is capable of a 130 dB dynamic range. In addition, it supports 32-bit/384 kHz playback for deeper detail and clarity. The headphone amplifier delivers up to 350 mW @ 32Ω, which admittedly far surpasses standard onboard audio, offering support for studio-grade headphones. DSD256 and ASIO 2.3 are also supported. What doesn't it have? No support for What-U-Hear, Super X-Fi, or the SmartComms Kit No EMI shielding, but it passed all the FCC emission tests (from the FAQ) I also want to make it clear that I am no audiophile. For me, it's purely subjective and it should just "work" out of the box. First impressions As I said in the introduction, I was a bit sad to see that the AE-X only supports stereo output, meaning it would not be on par with my ALC1220 over my speakers, as I mentioned it seems like this card is marketed toward headphone users. Since I am not an avid gamer that would rule me out as a potential customer, but I can still test its capabilities! The card arrived in a nice-looking box, as shown above. It's quite a bit larger than the Audify FX Pro that I reviewed back in April, and at first I thought the covering meant that it was EMI shielded, but it isn't as mentioned above in the highlights section. What's in the box: 1 x Sound Blaster AE-X PCIe card 1 x 3.5 mm CTIA TRRS to Dual TRS Headset Splitter Cable 1 x Quick Start Guide Aside from the Quick Start Guide, which someone at my age (I guess) needs a magnifying glass to read thanks to the tiny fonts, Creative Labs also has the manual online, which first requires you to prove that you're human in order to access it (so I can't direct link it). Anyway, the box is mostly made up of cardboard, and the only plastic in it is the anti-static bag for the card itself. Design Top Bottom The card itself looks pretty cool and actually wouldn't look out of place in an all-white build. There's only one connector, and for some reason it is awkwardly placed on the side (front-facing) that is for the front panel audio connector, which will let you use the headphones through the front PC audio jack. Since the front panel Headphone Amp has fewer capabilities than the rear headphone port, I decided not to use it. Rear of card PCI-e interface The rear of the card is completely open and is normally where you would find the front panel connector. The PCIe interface side is completely covered, which initially made me think it was EMI shielded. I/O panel Side (front-facing) with Front panel connector On the outer rear bracket side we have the TOSLINK SPDIF in, Coaxial SPDIF out, RCA line out (Right), RCA line out (Left), Headphone out, and Mic/Line in ports. On the front facing portion of the card itself is the F-panel connector. Usage Test System Our test system consists of the following: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D Gigabyte X870E AORUS MASTER (BIOS F12) Corsair RM1000x (2024) Thermal Grizzly Kyronaut (33x33x0,2mm) 2x 32GB Kingston Fury Beast RGB DDR5 6000MT/s CL36-38-38-80 T-Force Z540 2TB (PCIe Gen5) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Founders Edition (NVIDIA) Creative Sound Blaster AE-X Windows 11 25H2 Pro I installed the card into the Gigabyte X870E AORUS MASTER which includes the RealTek ALC1220 onboard audio. For our subjective listening tests, I used the Coaxial SPDIF port to my Logitech Z906 speakers. For headphone tests I used the OneOdio Studio Max 2 Wireless DJ Headphones that I reviewed last month. After installing the audio driver, I installed Creative Nexus, which is a relatively new app designed for the latest Sound Blaster cards. Then I discovered the AE-X needed both a driver update from 1.00.15.0001 to 1.01.09.000 and a firmware update from 1.00.06.0000 to 1.00.06.0002, then I was set to go. It should be noted that the card did not work without the driver (not Plug and Play). As you can see above, you can manage the firmware, driver, and inputs via Advanced Settings on the Device tab. By default Nexus enabled "Direct Mode". Upon clicking on Acoustic Engine, the Equalizer can be enabled and set to four different presets, which are: Gaming Music Movies Footsteps Enhancer There's also a dedicated Scout Mode for gamers. I mainly used Tidal and Spotify in the past week to listen to some of my Liked Songs (which now total over 700) in Shuffle mode; there were no pops or interference that I could hear. I also found a 5.1 Surround Music playlist on Tidal that sounded really great over Studio Max 2 headphones. When I reviewed the Audigy FX Pro, I went out and purchased a Logitech Z906 set second-hand for €100 specifically to use with the card, but in this instance all I could get on the AE-X was the 3D output of surround sound through Coaxial SPDIF and although it still sounded great, it isn't quite as good as DTS Interactive via my onboard Realtek ALC1220. Conclusion So what have I learned? The AE-X lacks multi-channel support for 5.1/7.1 setups and drops support for modern surround technologies like Dolby or DTS, functioning strictly as a stereo output device. So to really benefit, you will need Studio-grade headphones to "hear" the benefits of this card. With that being said, I can imagine it will appeal to gamers who are switching between console and PC. By utilizing the SPDIF in port, you could just plug your headphones into the AE-X (front or rear port) and then switch between PC and Console without having to move the headphones to a different port. As I said in the Sound Blaster Audigy review, the EQ in the Creative Nexus app offers safe presets, which allows a user to further tweak the lows, mids, and highs for a personal listening experience. Of course it all depends on the headphones you hook up to it. Speaking of headphones, I kind of wish I had higher-quality Studio-grade headphones to really test this card with; I'm not usually wearing headphones in my day to day duties. The only time I will wear them is if I want to listen to music very late at night and I don't want to disturb my neighbors, so my rating (verdict) is based on this fact. Someone with a PC/Console setup and wears headphone religiously to game, and consume media will benefit much more than I from the high-quality Headphone Amps that are included in the AE-X. Once again, I do feel like Creative could have gone the extra mile to support the S/PDIF port a bit more. Why include it if you're not supporting the main popular digital formats? It seems like the decision was more of a legacy-based one, offering uncompressed 2-channel PCM audio, for users with high-fidelity audio systems and external DACs. Maybe I will be lucky enough to review a card that truly includes all these features in the future. I am sure readers with far more knowledge on audio systems than me will correct me in the comments below. I'll just say I am happy to learn what I don't know! Where to buy The Sound Blaster AE-X is available to purchase now in preorder for $179.99 on the U.S. Creative website, or for £169.99 on the Creative UK website and will start shipping to customers from June 25.
    • $80 or 90%, anything else would be financial suicide one way or another.
    • Or... just use Bitwarden. Free, and has on-prem option as well. Works both on desktop and mobile, wherever you are. The age of local password files is over.
    • Thanks
    • I actually got to use one of those so called "backup codes" once. It was for a customer, I choose the backup code option, and by the grace of god, they actually hade them printed out. Imagine my surprise, when after using the backup code, Google then told use we had to enter a code they just sent to the gmail address we currently did not have access to. I was not amused, Google backup codes should be the end all get out of jail free card, because you had to have access to the account to even get them.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Supreme Spray LV earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Genuinetonerink- Dubai earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Genuinetonerink- Dubai earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      hhgygy earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      AMV earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      513
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      164
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      88
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      74
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!