Apple OS X Mountain Lion is now available for download. There are a ton of new features, but many of them are hidden or hard to find. Don’t worry, these are the best 10 tricks—each with a short, easy video tutorial created for Gizmodo by app developer It’s About Time. More »
After months of tantalizing beta teases, Apple’s latest OS X refresher is now available for download in the Mac App Store. The 4.05GB update will cost you an entirely reasonable $20, and features improvements like a new Notification Center, Twitter baked in throughout, and dictation that’s pleasantly—and surprisingly—decent. More »
Bad news, people. As expected, nothing has changed in the final version of OS X Mountain Lion. That’s why this is a revision of February’s Mountain Lion review, updated with impressions from all these months working with the betas and the final version that you can get from Apple now. More »
Mountain Lion hits the Mac App Store, is one $20 credit card deduction away
Posted in: Today's ChiliYou’ve read (or closely skimmed) the review, you’ve watched the video — now it’s time to fire up your downloading finger and see for yourself. The latest version of Apple OS X just hit the Mac App Store, carrying a a modest $20 price tag. Of course, this round is download-only, so if you want to get your grubby paws on the desktop version of AirPlay Monitoring, Messages, Share Sheets and the rest of those 200+ features, this is the only way to do it.
Update: Looks like the big cat is “Temporarily Unavailable” for download. We’ll let you know when that’s not the case.
Update: Everything seems to be fine now. Download away.
Continue reading Mountain Lion hits the Mac App Store, is one $20 credit card deduction away
Mountain Lion hits the Mac App Store, is one $20 credit card deduction away originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 08:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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A lot has changed since early 2001. We’ve got a new president approaching the end of his first term, the US has embarked on two major wars and the words “Lady Gaga” have become much more than just gibberish. Some things, however, don’t change. In nearly each of these intervening years, Apple has issued a major update to its desktop operating system, OS X. This time last year, the company issued OS 10.7 Lion, a king-of-the-jungle moniker many thought would mark the end of Apple’s big cat naming scheme and, by extension, the OS X lineage. In February, however, the old operating system showed she still had some life left in her, when the next edition was revealed, arriving over the summer and called Mountain Lion.
Based on the name alone, you’d think 10.8 would be a modest improvement over its predecessor — not unlike the baby step between Leopard (10.5) and Snow Leopard (10.6). But Apple insists that this latest build is more than just a seasonal refresh — in all, it boasts more than 200 new features. Some are major, including things like a new Notification Center, AirPlay Mirroring and a desktop version of Messages. Others, such as full-screen mode for Notes… not so much. What seems to unite the vast majority of the 200 features, however, is a nod to iOS. So, how easily can Mac users justify that $20 download? Follow along after the break, as we put those 200 features to the test.
Gallery: Mountain Lion Review
Continue reading Apple OS X Mountain Lion 10.8 review
Filed under: Software
Apple OS X Mountain Lion 10.8 review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 08:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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RoaringApps is pretty much stoked up about OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion which is said to roll out later today for $19.99 a pop, but like all new versions of software, there is a compatibility list that one needs to adhere to, in addition to a slew of new features, of course. Just to make sure that you have a full idea on whether your favorite app will play nice with Mountain Lion or not, RoaringApps is a website that will help you get the compatibility issues out of the way.
There is a whole long table of apps which show whether they are available on the App Store, and if they will play nice with the latest version of OS X. Those who plan to make the upgrade jump to OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion later today will definitely find it worth your time to check out RoaringApps.
By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple releases Mountain Lion gold master to developers, official version on the way?, Apple developers receive OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Developer Preview 3,
Apple just announced in its earnings call that OS X Mountain Lion is definitely coming out tomorrow. There have been rumors for a while now that that would be the date, but now it’s confirmed. So maybe get those backups cranked out tonight, eh? More »
Apple just confirmed in its Q3 2012 earnings report that Mountain Lion is coming tomorrow. The hotly anticipated 10.8 version of OS X brings with it a host of new features, as we’ve expounded upon in the past. The upgrade will be just $19.99 (unless you’ve recently bought a new Mac — in which case it’ll be free) and will be available via download on the Mac App Store in 24 hours or less. Better start finding some disk space.
Filed under: Software
Apple to release OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion tomorrow originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Jul 2012 16:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Apple announces Q3 2012 earnings: $35 billion revenue, $8.8 billion in net profits, declares another dividend
Posted in: Today's Chili
It’s hard to believe its been just three months since we were here last, but it’s true. It’s already earnings season again and, in the feast of financial conference calls, Apple is an entree. Not surprisingly, Cupertino was raking in the big bucks yet again, but it wasn’t quite the windfall of revenue the company has seen in the past. All told the company pulled in $35 billion in revenue, pocketing $8.8 billion of that as pure profit, a record for both in Q3. But, just cause it wasn’t quite as lucrative a quarter doesn’t mean the boys in Cupertino aren’t happy with the results. Profits were up $1.5 billion from Q3 of 2011, once again allowing the company to declare yet another cash dividend for its share holders. During the last three months the company shipped 17 million iPads, an 84 percent increase over the same quarter last year — a simply staggering number. And don’t think that its other premier gadget has plateaued. 26 million iPhones were also sold, representing a 28 percent increase year-over-year. Interestingly, Mac sales slowed, increasing just two percent over last year, largely thanks to a 13 percent drop off in desktop sales.
The biggest money maker for the company continues to be the iPhone and its related products and services, however. More than $16 billion of the total revenue is directly attributable to the smaller member of the iOS family. The iPad is quickly closing the gap, netting Apple over $9 billion in this quarter alone. As a percentage of revenue, the iPod continued to decline, marking the slow death of the once flagship product line.
While revenues were down sequentially, it’s the year-over-year numbers that tell the real story and that explain why, for the second quarter in a row, Apple is able to award its investors a $2.65 per-share dividend. Revenue was up $9.5 billion from Q3 of 2011 and net income by $1.5 billion, as the company has continued to increase its market share and open up to niches to itself. For the next quarter Apple actually expects a small drop in both revenue and earnings per-share, but not enough that we expect Wall Street types to start yelling, “sell, sell, sell!”
Filed under: Cellphones, Desktops, Laptops, Tablet PCs
Apple announces Q3 2012 earnings: $35 billion revenue, $8.8 billion in net profits, declares another dividend originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Jul 2012 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Talking To Your Mac: The Coolest Feature of Mountain Lion, and the Future of Computers [Video]
Posted in: Today's Chili Mountain Lion, the next big software cat for your Mac, has a gazillion new features. Too many to name, and frankly, to care about. But there’s one you should pay attention to, because it might change all of computing. More »