Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 12th Apr 2007 21:03 UTC, submitted by anonymous
Mac OS X Apple conceded that it will be unable to release its next generation operating system in June as previously planned and now says it anticipates launching the software in October. In a statement released after the close of the stock market, Apple said its highly anticipated iPhone has already passed several of its required certification tests and is on schedule to ship in late June as planned. "We can't wait until customers get their hands (and fingers) on it and experience what a revolutionary and magical product it is," Apple said. "However, iPhone contains the most sophisticated software ever shipped on a mobile device, and finishing it on time has not come without a price - we had to borrow some key software engineering and QA resources from our Mac OS X team, and as a result we will not be able to release Leopard at our WWDC in early June as planned." Update: New Leopard screenshots.
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Actually...
by s_groening on Thu 12th Apr 2007 21:33 UTC in reply to "macbreak weekly"
s_groening
Member since:
2005-12-13

Leopard might very well be an improvement for owners of Intel Macs, since it might very well be more fully adapted to the platform than Tiger is and was...

I somehow fear that PPC Mac users might not get 'as much' from the upgrade in terms of stability and general support of the platform, compared to Intel Mac users, since Tigers code base was probably at least as PPC oriented as it was Intel - but that's probably goin to change...

I.e. if you strip your version of iTunes 7 on a PPC for the Intel specific parts, you'll save up to 50% RAM usage and decrease cpu utilization by up to 40-50% as well... Now take an entire OS acting like that here and there... That's definately not goint to be pretty on a non G5 PPC system...

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