Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion

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I think this is actually one of Apples best policies - they are not trying to support decade old machines and code. Sometimes they just say "This is the new standard, old things won't work with it" which is something that gets MS in trouble with Windows.

Evolve or get left behind. It is one of the best policies a company can have. I have so many people coming into the store whining about how their 300 year old software will not work on Lion. I want to just laugh at them, but i cant. But it happens all the time. Freakin upgrade your shit people.
 
And here I was, just about to upgrade from Snow Leopard. Excited for notes and scheduler features, but I'm really excited for Lion's stuff that I've missed out on. Launchpad is niiiice.
 
Evolve or get left behind. It is one of the best policies a company can have. I have so many people coming into the store whining about how their 300 year old software will not work on Lion. I want to just laugh at them, but i cant. But it happens all the time. Freakin upgrade your shit people.

Eh the policy can go both ways, If I spend 1200+ on a laptop and it still works five years after buying it then I have every right to be angry that my hardware is not supported in the upgrade path.
 
I think it is time for anyone with a 32-bit computer to upgrade especially if you are wanting to use any new features. Everything seems to be going the route of 64-bit now. If you want to use new features you must have a newer computer or device.
 
Evolve or get left behind. It is one of the best policies a company can have. I have so many people coming into the store whining about how their 300 year old software will not work on Lion. I want to just laugh at them, but i cant. But it happens all the time. Freakin upgrade your shit people.

Yup. I had someone with AppleWorks installed who decided to upgrade to Lion. She brought in the computer wanting us to re-install Snow Leopard. Pain in the ass.
 
Eh the policy can go both ways, If I spend 1200+ on a laptop and it still works five years after buying it then I have every right to be angry that my hardware is not supported in the upgrade path.

If it still works with the OS you have, and it's five years old, why do you feel like you are entitled to have the latest software update?

five years is ancient history in tech. People who care about being up to date with the latest and greatest Apple software will typically not keep hardware that long. People who don't care will typically be fine with the one year old OS and five year old hardware.
 
Eh the policy can go both ways, If I spend 1200+ on a laptop and it still works five years after buying it then I have every right to be angry that my hardware is not supported in the upgrade path.
I think you should adjust your expectations a bit. How many Macs that shipped with OS X ever got software support past 5 years? There's usually a new OS X release every 2 years. Jobs' Cupertino was always about looking forward.
 
Eh the policy can go both ways, If I spend 1200+ on a laptop and it still works five years after buying it then I have every right to be angry that my hardware is not supported in the upgrade path.

Why would you need to upgrade, your hardware works fine. the problem is people think they NEED some of these upgrades - they do not.
 
Why would you need to upgrade, your hardware works fine. the problem is people think they NEED some of these upgrades - they do not.

Exactly. Your computer works fine, keep using it. New OS's are for well newer computers plain and simple.
 
I think you should adjust your expectations a bit. How many Macs that shipped with OS X ever got software support past 5 years? There's usually a new OS X release every 2 years. Jobs' Cupertino was always about looking forward.

I'm not an OS X user, so how this policy make OS X better than Windows or Linux? Because that's what it's all about, right?
 
Technology and standards are moving at a different pace today, and users just have to learn to adapt to it. Internet Explorer 6/7/8 is the prime example of letting users totally mess with advancement of technology and cost of web development.
 
Why would you need to upgrade, your hardware works fine. the problem is people think they NEED some of these upgrades - they do not.

I don't know if I need it yet. Will try 10.8 on my Air and partner's MBP and see if I can live without it on my Mac Pro— which I will have to replace* if I want 10.8.

*with a newer used Mac Pro or a hot-rodded Mini with a Thunderbolt enclosure?
 
I'm not an OS X user, so how this policy make OS X better than Windows or Linux? Because that's what it's all about, right?
No, I don't think anyone is arguing that. There are clear advantages to it though. Developers (both Apple and third parties) can spend less resources on supporting the old and instead put those to use developing on newer hardware which can do more with newer software.

Imagine if PPC was still supported today. Rather than dropping 64-bit Carbon completely like they did in Leopard, imagine if they didn't force developers onto Cocoa for 64-bit support. Seems absolutely crazy to me, considering how far ahead Cocoa is now.
 
iOS-like download bar when copying files in the Finder:

6891975839_ea7ea0da57.jpg


6891974781_225a4226e9_m.jpg
 
I'm not an OS X user, so how this policy make OS X better than Windows or Linux? Because that's what it's all about, right?

It's better becaue there is nothing holding them back. MS worries to make sure their OS can run on literally every single thing. Apple moves forward and doesn't let the hardware restrict themselves, it helps that they build their own hardware. It lets their OS updates have literally no limits, its why they can update and advance at a far faster rate than MS ever will.
 
They should start doing free OS upgrade if they plan to do it annually - similar to what they do with iPhone/iPad.
 
ios-5-style-notifications-mountain-lion-5.jpg


Two types, one that just shows the notification, and another that puts an 'open' option along with a 'close' one.

ios-5-style-notifications-mountain-lion-2.jpg


And swipe two fingers to the left (no matter what you're doing/what application open) to pull this out;

mountain-lion-notification-center.png


So I guess "Growl" will be obsolete, now that OSX ML has its own version built in...
 
They should start doing free OS upgrade if they plan to do it annually - similar to what they do with iPhone/iPad.

I don't see why. You'd expect primary OS upgrades to be free instead of $30....but if they were bi-annually at $60 you wouldn't complain, right?

IMO, free phone and tablet upgrades are simply "keeping up with the Jones'". Nobody in the industry charges for those updates. Apple tried to with iPods, but stopped, iirc. They really, really can't charge for them when you consider their already existing profit margins.

So I guess "Growl" will be obsolete, now that OSX ML has its own version built in...

yes and no. not every Mac can run Mountain Lion. not every Mac that can handle it will be updated to Mountain Lion. there will be a market for the foreseeable future, albeit smaller than they expected.
 
AHHHH, this is driving me nuts-o! I am not sure how many Gaffers here were actually mac fans/users when OSX first launched in 2000, but wasn't OSX 10.1 called Puma? Well, a mountain lion is actually a puma... so yeah... apple, great naming conventions... I am sure there has to be a biology nut somewhere at apple, or I am sure a quick google would have given you this information.

Anyway, I have kind of fallen away from apple in the past years since around 2003-ish or so. I dunno, they became the trendy thing and that really just pushed me away. Along with them forcing upgrades harder now than ever before with Power-PC being killed off, and now my Core Duo 2 can't even "handle" 10.8... :| Plus, the iOS'ing of Mac OSX has kind of rubbed me the wrong way since Lion.
 
AHHHH, this is driving me nuts-o! I am not sure how many Gaffers here were actually mac fans/users when OSX first launched in 2000, but wasn't OSX 10.1 called Puma? Well, a mountain lion is actually a puma... so yeah... apple, great naming conventions... I am sure there has to be a biology nut somewhere at apple, or I am sure a quick google would have given you this information.

Anyway, I have kind of fallen away from apple in the past years since around 2003-ish or so. I dunno, they became the trendy thing and that really just pushed me away. Along with them forcing upgrades harder now than ever before with Power-PC being killed off, and now my Core Duo 2 can't even "handle" 10.8... :| Plus, the iOS'ing of Mac OSX has kind of rubbed me the wrong way since Lion.


I just checked wiki.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cougar

The cougar (Puma concolor), also known as puma, mountain lion, mountain cat, catamount or panther, depending on the region, is a mammal of the family Felidae, native to the Americas.

so.. i guess they recycled the animal several times. meh.
 
Macs are going to run on iOS one day. They are slowly transitioning into it. Getting it more iOS like is a big reason why they are likely going to yearly updates. They are easing into it though to make it more seamless.

I really don't think Macs are going to run iOS. Apple's drawing a pretty clear contrast between the iOS/OS X strategy and what Microsoft is doing with Windows 8. Just because OS X is taking heavy UI inspiration from iOS doesn't mean that it's suddenly going to turn into iOS overnight.

Next up on the chopping block, I hope, is Dashboard. I'd love something *like* that when it comes to function, of course, but not nearly so shitty and slow.
 
If any of you remember the original iPhone and the showing of iOS (which wasn't called iOS at the time), and the marketing behind it, it was basically Apple saying they're bringing the best of OS X into mobile.

It's funny to see how the cycle has progressed where now the opposite is being done. I think it'll continue to go back and forth for a while, but an eventual merging is inevitable.

One of these steps is the elimination of as many useless windows as possible, when copying a file for example. I wonder if .jpg / .avi or all those .abc format lines will still be there by default.

I hide them all as it is, so I wouldn't be surprised if that's how it works in the future. Or perhaps a hover-to-reveal type of thing.
 
Macs are going to run on iOS one day. They are slowly transitioning into it. Getting it more iOS like is a big reason why they are likely going to yearly updates. They are easing into it though to make it more seamless.

You're so ridiculous with this stuff. Like it's some grand conspiracy.

They aren't going to force a touch screen interface on their traditional computer users who need visible file structures, a desktop interface, and use a mouse and keyboard.
 
Macs are going to run on iOS one day. They are slowly transitioning into it. Getting it more iOS like is a big reason why they are likely going to yearly updates. They are easing into it though to make it more seamless.
I doubt it, unless iOS starts borrowing alot from OS X; which I'm definitely not against.
 
I doubt it, unless iOS starts borrowing alot from OS X; which I'm definitely not against.

Unless the iPad and MacBook line merge to become some Transformer-like docking tablet thing, I just don't see it happening. One OS is designed for touch screens, and the other is designed for mice, keyboards, and trackpads. iOS would suck if you had to click everything with a mouse cursor.
 
yes and no. not every Mac can run Mountain Lion. not every Mac that can handle it will be updated to Mountain Lion. there will be a market for the foreseeable future, albeit smaller than they expected.

Apple has significantly higher upgrade rates in terms of OS than other companies, in part because of how aggressively they cut off end-of-lifed machines with new OSes. I assume the transition to thinking of OS as firmware will only increase the adoption rate.
 
Apple has significantly higher upgrade rates in terms of OS than other companies, in part because of how aggressively they cut off end-of-lifed machines with new OSes. I assume the transition to thinking of OS as firmware will only increase the adoption rate.

agree, but if I read correctly, everyone with a 2007/2008 Mac (depending) will not be able to upgrade. Lion is the end of the road for them. That should be a sizable audience for a couple more years.
 
I bet the owners of the OG Air, who are still satisfied with it, are going to love this explanation. And I'm sure the few 2006 MacBook users out there are thrilled as well. And others who own something from this list:
  • Anything with an Intel GMA 950 or x3100 integrated graphics card
  • Anything with an ATI Radeon X1600
  • MacBook models released prior to 2008
  • Mac Mini released prior to 2007
  • iMac models released prior to 2007
  • Original MacBook Air
(lol at MacBook owners)

What I want to say: This is bullshit.

2006 MacBook owners already couldn't install Lion. I know, I still use one as my "beater" laptop.

No big deal though, since Apple still keeps Snow Leopard updated. They are almost six year-old machines, and that's a long time for a laptop.

Mine still runs pretty great, but sadly physical things on the machine are breaking down now, just from use/abuse. I've got some pretty good cracks in the plastic, and my speaker wore out a few months ago. Will replace it for an Air, but I will wait until I have no choice, I guess, especially since Intel is making us wait for the goods.
 
What I want to say: This is bullshit.

Don't get all huffy. Its not like computers cease to function. Snow Leopard on this machine is still a joy to use. Ha, speaking of which right around now is the 5 year anniversary of my computer. February something.
 
Did anybody else notice that indicator lights are on in all the screenshots? I wonder if that's the new default from Lions having them all off?
 
I bet the owners of the OG Air, who are still satisfied with it, are going to love this explanation. And I'm sure the few 2006 MacBook users out there are thrilled as well. And others who own something from this list:
  • Anything with an Intel GMA 950 or x3100 integrated graphics card
  • Anything with an ATI Radeon X1600
  • MacBook models released prior to 2008
  • Mac Mini released prior to 2007
  • iMac models released prior to 2007
  • Original MacBook Air
(lol at MacBook owners)

What I want to say: This is bullshit.

Are you Kidding? A 5 year old machine should be supported?
 
That's great and all but are they going to let you delete icons from Launchpad and did they figure out a fix for resizing image thumbnails in Finder?

I can't believe I even have to ask this shit on here.
Why would you even use Launchpad when Spotlight exists? Are you 6 or 60?
 
Are you Kidding? A 5 year old machine should be supported?
Yeah, come on people. They're acting as if the computer will just brick when this release. IT'S STILL USABLE.

People being revolted for not being able to use the newest release of software, is the bullshit. It isn't a natural born right, people.
 
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