Mac OS X Leopard
Mac OS X Leopard | |
---|---|
developer | Apple Inc. |
License (s) | EULA ; APSL , BSD , GPL , among others |
First publ. | October 26, 2007 |
Current version |
10.5.8 of August 5, 2009 (1 year and 25 days ago) |
Basic system | Darwin |
Kernel | hybrid ( XNU ) |
ancestry |
Unix → BSD ↳ NeXTStep / OPENSTEP ↳ Rhapsody ↳ Mac OS X (macOS) Mac OS Classic ↳ Mac OS X 10.0+ |
Architecture (s) | PowerPC , x86 , x64 |
timeline | 10.4 ← 10.5 → 10.6 |
compatibility | UNIX 03 ( POSIX etc.), FreeBSD |
Languages) |
multilingual ( details ), u. a. German |
unavailable; |
Leopard , fully Mac OS X Leopard 10.5 , is the sixth major version of macOS , Apple's desktop operating system , which was introduced under the name Mac OS X at the time. It followed on Mac OS X Tiger 10.4 and was shipped from October 26, 2007 after it had to be postponed by about half a year due to capacity reasons (for the timely completion of the iPhone mobile phone ).
The biggest innovations, apart from a modernized interface (transparent menu bar, three-dimensional dock with “ stacks ”, virtual work areas “ Spaces ”, uniform layout, new icons) included a new finder with a new sidebar, the “ Cover Flow ” - View, the “ Quick Look ” file preview and the ability to search other computers in the network. A data backup software called Time Machine is also integrated. Boot Camp enables the installation of Microsoft Windows from Windows XP with Service Pack 2 on Apple computers equipped with Intel processors parallel to Mac OS X on a separate partition . Leopard also enables 64-bit operation for applications with a graphical user interface. Other major innovations can also be found in Safari , Mail , iCal , iChat , Preview and Parental Control.
As the first derivative of Berkeley Software Distribution, Leopard is officially allowed to use the brand name “UNIX” (in capital letters or small caps ) because it conforms to the Open Group's single UNIX Specification UNIX 03 .
The last version 10.5.8 was published on August 5, 2009, the successor operating system is called Mac OS X Snow Leopard (version 10.6) and was published on August 28, 2009. Leopard is the last Mac OS X version to support the PowerPC processor. All newer versions only run on Intel Macs.
Features / innovations
Mac OS X 10.5 “Leopard” contains numerous programs that perform frequently used functions. Multimedia applications are almost completely missing from the scope of delivery of the system, but are delivered with the Apple hardware in a program package called iLife . For office applications, Mac OS X only contains the simple word processing program TextEdit and the calendar iCal.
The Classic environment was set with Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard", so that the virtualization of Mac OS 9 and hence to perform older Macintosh programs so that is no longer possible. However, there are alternative virtualization programs or emulators that also run under Leopard, such as the free SheepShaver .
According to Apple, Mac OS X 10.5 offers over 300 new features compared to 10.4. These include:
- User functions
- New Automator to help you create workflows faster
- improved finder with new functions
- Boot Camp , software that installs Microsoft Windows on an Intel Mac
- Animated 3D dock
- Video recording in Photo Booth possible
- Safari 3 as a browser (also available for Tiger )
- Spotlight can now search computers over the network and has calculator functions
- Spaces (multiple virtual workspaces )
- Time Machine
- Mail 3
- Developer functions
- Native support for many libraries and frameworks for 64-bit applications
- OpenGL has been updated to the latest version 2.1
- No support for Mac OS Classic applications anymore
- Certification as Unix
- Core animation
- Dashcode
System requirements
Apple specifies the following system requirements for Leopard :
- Mac computers with an Intel processor, PowerPC G4 (867 MHz or faster), or G5 processor
- At least 512 MB of RAM
- FireWire (integrated)
- DVD drive for installation
- 9 GB of free space on the hard drive
Leopard is available as a universal binary and thus supports the processor architectures of the PPC (Motorola PowerPC G4 / IBM PowerPC G5 ) and x86 (Intel Core Solo / Core Duo / Core 2 Duo / Xeon ) types .
safety
On the subject of security, see the main article .
history
Mac OS X version | -Build | Publication date | annotation | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10.5 | 9A581 | October 26, 2007 | First published version | ||
10.5.1 | 9B18 | November 15, 2007 | Extends and optimizes the firewall | ||
10.5.2 | 9C31 | February 11, 2008 | Numerous changes | ||
10.5.3 | 9D34 | May 28, 2008 | Over 220 changes, security updates | ||
10.5.4 | 9E17 | June 30, 2008 | Bug fixes, security updates | ||
10.5.5 | 9F33 | September 15, 2008 | Bug fixes, security updates | ||
10.5.6 | 9G55 | December 16, 2008 | Numerous changes, security updates | ||
10.5.7 | 9J61 | May 12, 2009 | Codenamed "Juno." Numerous changes, security updates | ||
10.5.8 | 9L30 | August 5, 2009 | Code name "Loki." Numerous changes | ||
Legend:
Old version
|
Web links
- John Siracusa: Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard: the Ars Technica review . Ars Technica, October 29, 2007.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Open Brand Certificate to Apple (PDF; 81 kB) The certificate directly from the Opengroup website.
- ↑ Apple: New Features in Mac OS X Leopard ( Memento from August 16, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Information about 10.5.1 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.2 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.3 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.4 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.5 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.6 at Apple
- ↑ Information about 10.5.7 at Apple
- ↑ a b Slash Lane: Tidbit: Apple naming Leopard point release after ancient gods. In: AppleInsider. Quiller Media, Inc., June 25, 2009, accessed on February 4, 2017 (English, purely internal code name , which is derived from the letter in the build, 9 J 61 → “ J uno”, and is usually not public): “Obviously , AppleInsider publishes this information purely for interest's sake, as it has little material value. "
- ↑ Information about 10.5.8 at Apple