Speculation is rampant that Mach, which is a component of the OS X kernel, will be axed from OS X 10.5 (Leopard). If you read Cringely’s treatise on monolithic kernels you’ll get the gist of the ...
Apple Computer this week delivered to developers Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard build 9A303, the latest in an extremely limited series of pre-release builds of its next-generation operating system. People ...
Apple will ship its new Mac OS X version, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, on Friday, Aug. 28, the company’s Web site confirmed today. Speculation has run rampant in the last week about the Aug. 28 date, ...
Continuing to refine its recently-released Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard operating system at a rapid pace, Mac maker Apple Inc. will soon begin testing the first pre-release builds of Mac OS X 10.5.2 Update, ...
A change to the licensing agreement for Apple’s OS X Leopard Server operating system software will allow users to run virtual machines on Apple hardware. Before Mac OS X Leopard shipped, the license ...
Apple tasks Mac users to rise to the next level On Saturday night, after I received my OS X Leopard client and server discs, I checked into a local hotel to work on my review of OS X Leopard, ...
Though some thought it was released too soon, Mac OS X 10.5 has matured into a solid operating system It has been just over six months since Mac OS X “Leopard” first shipped, bringing with it a slew ...
Are you curious how expose in OS X will work with the upcoming “spaces” virtual desktop feature? Take a look. You can easily move windows between desktops and expose will “re-expose” the desktop once ...
This story caps off a truly comprehensive wave of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard coverage from Computerworld. Our readers have asked for more operating system coverage, and we’re delivering. The questions that ...
The relatively close release dates of both OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and Windows 7 plus the awesomeness of both operating systems are generating much publicity. Inevitably, both OSes will also be the ...
If you’re running Leopard, hit Command + Shift + 4 and then the space bar, and you’ll see an icon of a camera that harks back to Steve Jobs’s days at NeXT. The decades-old icon is one of the last ...