Tweetbot for Mac arrives as free alpha, we give a quick hands-on

Tweetbot for Mac arrives as free alpha, we give a quick handson

Seemingly anyone who’s used an iPhone (and often the iPad) knows Tweetbot — it’s often the go-to Twitter app for those who prefer not to go the official route. It’s to those users’ delight, then, that Tapbots just posted a free alpha version of Tweetbot for Mac. As you’d anticipate, it’s an attempt to bring much of the app’s power user mojo to the desktop world: you can check just retweets of your content, mute overly chatty people or hashtags, and otherwise get more control than just watching your stream drift by. It’s even (mostly) Retina-ready for that new MacBook Pro. Alpha does mean that there will be a fair amount of things missing; it won’t tap into iCloud or Mountain Lion’s Notification Center until it’s official, for example. But if you’re willing to deal with that and a few potential bugs, it may be time to brush other apps aside — just note that you’ll need Mountain Lion or newer when the app is ready to face the Mac App Store, even though it works with Lion today.

We’ve had a quick spin with the app, and it largely does what it says on the tin: it’s Tweetbot, on the Mac. The primary differences are changes that make sense when a mouse pointer and a larger screen area are available. You can reply, retweet, or view whole conversations from buttons that appear as you hover, rather than using the myriad taps and swipes of the iOS apps. It’s a wonderfully minimalist app, if that’s your thing, and you can open multiple windows (currently through a keyboard shortcut) to get some of that TweetDeck-style power user layout. Our main gripe? Tweetbot on the Mac always updates in a live stream, and there’s no option for intervals; if you follow a lot of people, there’s a chance you might miss something. Still, for an alpha, it’s a decidedly polished and useful effort that doesn’t leave us wanting like a few clients, including Twitter’s own.

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Tweetbot for Mac arrives as free alpha, we give a quick hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 13:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple sunsets a few 64-bit Macs with Mountain Lion, video drivers likely the culprit

OS X Mountain Lion About This Mac

Apple is well-known for wanting a close spread in hardware requirements with OS X upgrades, having dropped PowerPC like a hot potato when Snow Leopard arrived just three years after the Intel switch. Whether or not you’re a fan of that policy, it’s certainly carrying forward with Mountain Lion. When the newly-finished OS hits the Mac App Store, it will rule out the very first wave of 64-bit Macs: certain MacBook Pros, Mac Pros and other early systems will be denied a taste of 10.8. Some sleuthing from Ars Technica suggests that it’s a matter of graphics drivers rather than capriciousness on Apple’s part, as the Macs excluded from the mix are using 32-bit drivers that won’t play nicely with Mountain Lion’s 64-bit Utopia short of a wide-scale conversion effort. It’s little consolation to those who dropped a pretty penny on certain Macs just a few years ago. That said, Apple is still going the extra mile to support some systems — if you’re reading this on an original aluminum iMac, you’re sitting pretty.

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Apple sunsets a few 64-bit Macs with Mountain Lion, video drivers likely the culprit originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 11:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Check Here If Your Mac Is Eligible For a Mountain Lion Upgrade [Mountain Lion]

With Mountain Lion reaching gold master status, it means Apple is nearly ready to ship OS X Mountain Lion to customers like you. But in order to use Mountain Lion, you have to have a certain type of Mac. Apple is cutting off older Macs from using Mountain Lion by making them ineligible for the upgrade. More »

Apple Mountain Lion Gold Master is up for the download

Apple OS X 108 Mountain Lion Gold Master is up for the download

Last month at WWDC, Apple promised that consumers would be able to get their grubby paws on Mountain Lion come July. It looks like the latest version of OS X is one step closer to being fully-baked, with seeds of the Gold Master hitting the company’s developer download site today. The operating system upgrade will run you $20 when it’s ready for us non-developers. In the meantime, here’s a hands-on with the beta version of the OS.

Apple Mountain Lion Gold Master is up for the download originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Jul 2012 18:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple releases Mountain Lion gold master to developers, official version on the way?

Apple announced at WWDC that Mac OSX 10.8 Mountain Lion would be released during the month of July. They gave no official exact release date, but rumors indicate a July 19th release. Our latest bit of news has helped confirm that Mountain Lion is indeed on track for a July release.

Apple has just released the gold master build of Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. It is currently available on Apple’s Developer site. The release of the gold master build or “final build” means that -in theory- a release to the general public will definitely happen in the month of July as promised and is just a matter of when Apple wants to release it. We’ll keep you updated on the status of Mountain Lion as more info becomes available on a release date. Are you excited for Mountain Lion? Will you be upgrading you computer to the latest OS X? Let us know in the comments section below.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple developers receive OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Developer Preview 3, Apple releases OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Developer Preview 2,

Apple OS X Mountain Lion Gold Master Is Out [Apple]

The Gold Master version of Apple’s OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion is now available on the OS X Dev Center. Gold Master versions are the final build that ships to customers, so what we see here will be what you’re using later this month when the retail version comes out for $20. More »