Amazon is now accepting pre-orders for Mac OSX 10.6 Snow Leopard, for an incredible price of $29. The five user family pack costs $49 and the server edition is $49. You can bundle iLife and iWork with Snow Leopard for an additional $169 and $229. Unlike Windows 7, most people do not see the operating system being in short supply come launch time, but if your worried here.
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Friday, June 12, 2009
Snow Leopard vs. Windows 7: Round One
Its easier than ever to put Mac OSX 10.6 Snow Leopard head to head because they will be launching within a month of each other. This brings up the question: which is better? Hmm…
Windows 7 uses basically the same foundation as Windows Vista while fixing the insides and making it look better while Snow Leopard focuses more on the core.
Price and Availability
The obvious winner is Snow Leopard. Snow Leopard is shipping in September for an upgrade price of only $29, Windows 7 does not come out until October 22 and there are roomers that it could be more expensive than Vista.
Performance
Windows 7 are designed to chew up less system resources. Apple promises that Snow Leopard will give you back 6 GB of Hard Drive space because Apple got rid of all PowerPC code. Microsoft has not talked about how much less space Windows 7 will take up, but they have came up with innovative ways for drivers to take up less space.
Browser
Internet Explorer 8 is by far the best browser Microsoft has ever made but Safari is much better at handling JavaScript which is important now of days.
Networking
Networking is much easier in Windows 7. You can now create a home network without the need to click buttons a few million times, and the new user interface makes much more sense.
Backup
Time Machine is awesome because it just works. Backups in Windows 7 is much better as well, and its written in PLAIN ENGLISH.
Dock vs. Taskbar
I personally think that the new taskbar is much better. Jump lists help when doing common tasks and Aero Peek is a nice touch. Little changes like Aero Snap, Shake and Peek also helped.
Snow Leopards UI is pretty much the same as Leopard, but it manages to improve in Exposé. You can do much more with the dock now, so you can easily drop files in whatever app window you want to. Exposé, my "I would die without it" feature in Leopard, now arranges windows in a neat grid, rather than scattering them across whatever space is available. Stacks is actually useful now too, since they're scrollable and you can look in folders within stacks in Snow Leopard.
Backgrounds
Windows 7 backgrounds are much better. I'm kind of tired of the OSX space background, its getting old.
Battery Life
Windows 7 supposedly improves notebook battery life by a minimum of 11 percent. On the Snow Leopard front, well, um, all of the new Macs have much bigger batteries? Since Apple didn't drop a slide at WWDC telling the whole world, we can presume there isn't any benefit.
Media
Windows Media Player can handle pretty much any format you throw at it. The UI is a little complex because its trying to do too much. It has some nice tweaks like play to, which will stream media to any compatible devices on your network. Quick Time 10 isthe same except the new logo. Like Windows Media Player, Quick Time can can handle almost all major formats.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Apple Bashes Windows 7, While Talking Snow Leopard
While Microsoft tries to reinvent Windows with their next operating system, Windows 7 Apple has characterised it as “the same old Windows”.
In a keynote speech at the Worldwide Developer Conference Apples Bertrand Serlet said that Windows 7 contained the same complexities of previous versions of Windows.
“Fundamentally it is just another Windows Vista” – Bertrand Serlet
Serlet tried to draw a contrast between Windows and what Apple is doing with Snow Leopard, the next version of its own operating system. "We've come at it from such a different place."
Apples goal with Snow Leopard is to make a “better Leopard”
There are similarities between what Apple's and Microsoft's efforts. Among the new features in Snow Leopard is a feature that adds the Expose window--previewing feature to the Dock--not unlike the Aero Peek feature that Windows 7 has as part of its new task bar.
In all fairness Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are very different Operating Systems.
Windows 7 is largely focused on improving the look, perception and core of the Vista engine, while Snow Leopard is more focused on improving the core.
Apple is also trying to improve Windows compatibility by adding Microsoft Exchange support in Snow Leopard. According to Apple all the user needs to type their e-mail address and password and Snow Leopard will auto detect the exchange server.