Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Fri 26th Oct 2007 05:36 UTC
Mac OS X "What's new in Leopard? A lot. From the unified interface (goodbye, brushed aluminum) to major under-the-hood changes, to wholly new apps, Leopard is a substantial, albeit evolutionary, advance for Mac OS X that builds on a solid foundation and adds a modicum of eye candy to reinforce the notion that this is something new and improved. It's also fast - especially impressive given the new graphics sprinkled throughout the OS."
Thread beginning with comment 280907
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Duffman
Member since:
2005-11-23

Because Windows Vista is a much bigger release than any of the OS X .x releases.


When I take a look at Leopard changes under the hood (kernel, UNIX certification, dtrace, sandbox, obj-c 2.0, new TCP IP stack, scripting bridges, etc...) I am sorry but your statement *is* wrong.

The kernel changed possibly more in Leopard than in Vista which is based on the windows 2003 server.

Sure I change your words, but just to enlight that between 2 authors on OSnews, there will be very different point of view.

Edited 2007-10-26 09:34

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2