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Any virus that has code for OS X - is not a "PC Virus"? :p I just feel it is an unwanted dig at Windows (err PC) by Apple..again.

Modern worms don't work the way they used to - 90% start out as just a "spread to everything you can" bit of code coupled with a "get some instructions from here" block. It isn't until the malware has had a while to become established and sold that it becomes a spam network, used in a ddos, etc.

It would be trivial to add some code to the next Storm upate that looks for HFS+ mounted partitions (about 12 lines of code) and writes a 20-line shell script to the appropriate location and have it look up instructions appropriate for Mac OS X.

Their reason Apple gives is reasonable: we don't want <Operating System Y> infecting Mac OS X. The problem is that their solution is completely ineffective at stopping the real problem. It's as bad as Vista's "Are you really sure?" warnings: they annoy you when you're doing something you intend to, and they do nothing to stop you from accidently ****ing up the works.

I believe Windows 7 includes "Problem Steps Recorder" that lets you record your screen, although its usage is a little different.

Snow Leopard is what I thought it would be, and that's a very good thing. They are also bundling some new fonts, too.

But one thing that throws me off. Leopard was promoted as being "64-bit top to bottom," and now it seems that it really wasn't? Because now Snow Leopard is also proclaiming to be 64-bit ready. I'm very confused. Did Apple basically lie about Leopard being 64-bit?

Essentially, yes. As far as I know, only certain parts of the OS were 64-bit, the rest of it was 32-bit.

If you order a new MPB say tomorow, will your update to Snow Leopard be free?

No, but I believe you can get it for a discounted $9.95.

I must say the price is right for Snow Leopard. $29 is more than acceptable, and if you consider that is has no product keys or activation, then you also don't need to waste money on the $49 "family pack."

But, again, some confusion. Is $29 considered a "full" or "upgrade" price? In other words, what if you are running Tiger? Do you have to buy the $169 bundle, which I assume would be considered a "full" Snow Leopard price? Or, must you first upgrade to Leopard and then Snow Leopard?

Also, Apple's product literature seems to confirm that Snow Leopard is Intel-only, which means it looks like PowerPC users are officially dead to Apple.

Essentially, yes. As far as I know, only certain parts of the OS were 64-bit, the rest of it was 32-bit.

Wonderful. So, is Apple being truthful this time? Is Snow Leopard truly 64-bit top to bottom, like they proclaimed Leopard was?

Wonderful. So, is Apple being truthful this time? Is Snow Leopard truly 64-bit top to bottom, like they proclaimed Leopard was?

Supposedly, although I don't have a Mac (nor a build of Snow Leopard) to find out. I've screen shots of having both 32-bit and 64-bit System Preferences split, which looks messy.

And yes, Snow Leopard is Intel-only. PPC is dead to Apple.

Supposedly, although I don't have a Mac (nor a build of Snow Leopard) to find out. I've screen shots of having both 32-bit and 64-bit System Preferences split, which looks messy.

And yes, Snow Leopard is Intel-only. PPC is dead to Apple.

Well, at least they supported them for nearly four years. I figured sooner or later they would cut off support.

Although, the high-end G5 workstations still aren't all that bad, as many had two physical processors and could probably still compete with even the Core 2 Duo.

Well, at least they supported them for nearly four years. I figured sooner or later they would cut off support.

Although, the high-end G5 workstations still aren't all that bad, as many had two physical processors and could probably still compete with even the Core 2 Duo.

and the beautiful thing about these high end g5 workstation is that you can buy it for less than $800 dollars, originally cost $2999

I don't think we'd see these huge improvements as big as they are now if they had to code for PPC as well. Now they just had to focus on Intel's part of the code. Should make code much cleaner, easier to understand, and smaller. Everyone's the winner at Apple, everyone with an intel iMac too, the rest who have G5... upgrade or stay with Leopard, it's not because something better is out that Leopard is a bad OS ! It had to happen someday!

Although, the high-end G5 workstations still aren't all that bad, as many had two physical processors and could probably still compete with even the Core 2 Duo.

As far as I know the latest high-end G5 already scored much lower than the white Core 2 Duo iMacs. Let alone the current aluminium ones.

$29 gets you an update to Snow Leopard from Leopard, so I'm assuming each copy of Snow Leopard has its own serial that you input? If you have two Macs, then you are required to buy a family pack, correct?

But how can they verify it? Like I know on PC computers you are forced to put in a Serial #, but I've never had to do that anytime I've formatted any Mac computer...

$29 gets you an update to Snow Leopard from Leopard, so I'm assuming each copy of Snow Leopard has its own serial that you input? If you have two Macs, then you are required to buy a family pack, correct?

But how can they verify it? Like I know on PC computers you are forced to put in a Serial #, but I've never had to do that anytime I've formatted any Mac computer...

Mac OS X has no activation. The family pack is there for the ethics; there is nothing to prevent you from taking that $29 DVD and installing it on 1,000 new Macs.

actually i think its more

Service Pack = 10.5.*

Upgrade = 10.*.*

10.5.6 was a service pack to 10.5.5

10.5 is to 10.6, as vista is to 7

and 10.4/10.5 is about the same as XP/Vista, just like 10.5/10.6 is Vista to 7

Actually Microsoft charges $0 for its upgrades to its OS's unlike Apple. (Service Packs they call them)

Microsoft will be charging $49 for an upgrade to Windows 7 OS from Vista (Home Premium)

Sorry, I didnt mean to remove the wool from your eyes... carry on

actually i think its more

Service Pack = 10.5.*

Upgrade = 10.*.*

10.5.6 was a service pack to 10.5.5

10.5 is to 10.6, as vista is to 7

and 10.4/10.5 is about the same as XP/Vista, just like 10.5/10.6 is Vista to 7

Call them whatever you want, but I see 6 10.x's and I see Windows XP, Windows Vista ($99 upgrade), and Windows 7 ($49 upgrade)

10.0->10.1 (16)

10.1->10.2 (80)

10.3(130)

10.4(190)

10.5(130)

10.6(29)

Feel free to correct my prices, I just found them on a random site, but I think you get the picture

Actually Microsoft charges $0 for its upgrades to its OS's unlike Apple. (Service Packs they call them)

Microsoft will be charging $49 for an upgrade to Windows 7 OS from Vista (Home Premium)

Sorry, I didnt mean to remove the wool from your eyes... carry on

Getting so, so fed up of this.

Please don't participate in this thread if you're going to post garbage like this. If all these millions Apple customers are satisfied that they're getting value for money for the major OS versions at $129 a pop, then that's all that matters.

I know it hurt for the folks who stood by Vista, and watched it get railed by almost every tech journalist on the planet whilst Leopard was almost universally praised.. really, I do understand. But you need to get over it. Windows 7 looks like it will launch to much more positive reviews.

What still makes me boil inside is how you can have fans of Microsoft Windows, defending how most of the changes in Vista "were under the covers" and not immediately visible to the less technically minded or less experienced with Windows. How can those same fans lambast OSX which, essentially, has been incremented in the same way for years - subtle changes to the UI but with huge improvements underneath. Can't you see the BLINDING hypocrisy of your comments?! I mean - are people really this ignorant and so blinded by their adoration for their beloved vendor?

Sorry, I didnt mean to remove the wool from your eyes... carry on

Ah - thanks. Seeing as I'm just a naive little kiddy who doesn't know he's being ripped off by Apple, I really needed your in-depth expertise and insight. :rolleyes:

Getting so, so fed up of this.

Please don't participate in this thread if you're going to post garbage like this. If all these millions Apple customers are satisfied that they're getting value for money for the major OS versions at $129 a pop, then that's all that matters.

I know it hurt for the folks who stood by Vista, and watched it get railed by almost every tech journalist on the planet whilst Leopard was almost universally praised.. really, I do understand. But you need to get over it. Windows 7 looks like it will launch to much more positive reviews.

What still makes me boil inside is how you can have fans of Microsoft Windows, defending how most of the changes in Vista "were under the covers" and not immediately visible to the less technically minded or less experienced with Windows. How can those same fans lambast OSX which, essentially, has been incremented in the same way for years - subtle changes to the UI but with huge improvements underneath. Can't you see the BLINDING hypocrisy of your comments?! I mean - are people really this ignorant and so blinded by their adoration for their beloved vendor?

Ah - thanks. Seeing as I'm just a naive little kiddy who doesn't know he's being ripped off by Apple, I really needed your in-depth expertise and insight. :rolleyes:

ya, u mad.

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    • expected when they force you by having to use TPM and secure boot for anti cheat crap, and lazy developers only test on windows 11.
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    • LosslessCut 3.69 by Razvan Serea LosslessCut aims to be the ultimate cross platform FFmpeg GUI for extremely fast and lossless operations on video, audio, subtitle and other related media files. The main feature is lossless trimming and cutting of video and audio files, which is great for saving space by rough-cutting your large video files taken from a video camera, GoPro, drone, etc. It lets you quickly extract the good parts from your videos and discard many gigabytes of data without doing a slow re-encode and thereby losing quality. Or you can add a music or subtitle track to your video without needing to encode. Everything is extremely fast because it does an almost direct data copy, fueled by the awesome FFmpeg which does all the grunt work. Features Lossless cutting of most video and audio formats Losslessly cut out parts of video/audio (for cutting away commercials etc.) Losslessly rearrange the order of video/audio segments Lossless merge/concatenation of arbitrary files (with identical codecs parameters, e.g. from the same camera) Lossless stream editing: Combine arbitrary tracks from multiple files (ex. add music or subtitle track to a video file) Losslessly extract all tracks from a file (extract video, audio, subtitle, attachments and other tracks from one file into separate files) Batch view for fast multi-file workflow Remux into any compatible output format Take full-resolution snapshots from videos in JPEG/PNG format Manual input of cutpoint times Apply a per-file timecode offset (and auto load timecode from file) Change rotation/orientation metadata in videos View technical data about all streams Timeline zoom and frame/keyframe jumping for accurate cutting around keyframes Saves per project cut segments to project file View FFmpeg last command log so you can modify and re-run recent commands on the command line Undo/redo Give labels to cut segments View segment details, export/import cut segments as CSV Import segments from: MP4/MKV chapters, Text file, YouTube, CSV, CUE, XML (DaVinci, Final Cut Pro) Video thumbnails and audio waveform Edit file metadata and per-stream metadata Edit per-stream disposition Cut with chapter marks Annotate segments with tags View subtitles Example lossless use cases Cut out commercials from a recorded TV show (and re-format from TS to MP4) Remove audio tracks from a file Extract music track from a video and cut it to your needs Add music to a video (or replace existing audio track) Combine audio and video tracks from separate recordings Include an external subtitle into a video Quickly change a H264/H265 MKV video to MOV or MP4 for playback on iPhone Import a list of cut times from other tool as a EDL (edit decision list, CSV) and run these cuts with LosslessCut Export a list of cut times as a CSV EDL and process these in another tool Quickly cut a file by its MP4/MKV chapters Quickly cut a YouTube video by its chapters (or music times from a comment) Change the language of a file's audio/subtitle tracks Attach cover art to videos Change author, title, GPS position, recording time of a video Fix rotation of a video that has the wrong orientation flag set Great for rotating phone videos that come out the wrong way without actually re-encoding the video. Loop a video / audio clip X times quickly without re-encoding LosslessCut 3.69.0 changelog: Add lossless cropping & aspect ratio override via bitstream and container metadata #643 Alow shifting tracks for each file (-itsoffset) #216 Add "decimate video" tool to filter away all non-keyframes #2111 Add Windows ARM 64 native build with native ffmpeg Move timecode out of timeline and make it copy-able #2592 #2691 #2800 #483 #2808 Upgrade Electron to latest Add new "opposing" align mode #2654 Add FFmpeg -hwaccel auto setting for hardware acceleration of certain operations Add API events export-start and export-complete Allow deleting track metadata #2819 Improve shift segments dialog #2839 Show keyboard shortcuts inside button tooltips in UI Warn if trying to cut with too few keyframes around cutpoint #516 #2780 #2756 (Linux) include app name in notification #2794 Pull latest translations Other notable changes: Advanced output directory selector #2101 #2115 #2755 increase max file name length to 250 (truncation) #2779 don't reset playback speed when using special playback modes #2889 preserve chapters when merging files that already have chapters don't merge adjacent segments in combineOverlappingSegments #2896 don't transfer segment name when filling gaps #2754 always scroll up to zoom in #2703 #2786 increase max keyframes to 10000 Don't bind ctrl/cmd+c by default (they interfer with copying text) Many other improvements and fixes Download: LosslessCut 3.69.0 | ARM64 | ~100.0 MB (Open Source) Links: LosslessCut Website | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
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