Apple’s Grand Central Dispatch goes open source — get at those cores, people

Grand Central Dispatch may not exactly be a household name to the average Apple user, but it’s certainly a hot topic among developers, who may know it better as “libdispatch,” and are no doubt thrilled that Apple has now made the whole thing open source. Among other things, that means developers are now able to take full advantage of multi-core processors in Snow Leopard, which obviously has some fairly big implications for applications as soon as those developers are able to get a handle on things. Know what you’re doing? Just like to get in over your head? Then you can find the complete source code and other necessary information at the read link below.

[Via Slashdot]

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Apple’s Grand Central Dispatch goes open source — get at those cores, people originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 15:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac OS X 10.6.1 update now live

Well, that was fast — just over week after Snow Leopard officially shipped, the first update’s on the books. Nothing major in the changelog here, but we’re told Flash has been updated to a newer, more secure version. Let us know how it goes for you, eh?

Continue reading Mac OS X 10.6.1 update now live

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Mac OS X 10.6.1 update now live originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 18:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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15 Snow Leopard Tricks You Have to Try

Snow Leopard is finally reaching the masses. As much as we like it, though, the interface feels awfully similar to its predecessor. Here are 15 tricks to check out that are undeniably new—and even a little exciting:

Gallery haters take note, clicking here will take you to a giant list of the tips.

[Back to our Complete Guide to Snow Leopard]


Sync Contacts with Gmail and Yahoo: No longer just for syncing with the iPhone and Mobile Me, the Contacts app can now talk to your Yahoo and Gmail address books, and pull down your contact info. It’s as simple as going into Contacts preferences and hitting the Accounts tab.


Show Date In Menu Bar: If, like me, you’re too lazy to click on the clock, or launch widgets, or just make use of your God-gifted memory, you can now set the clock to display full date in the Menu Bar, just go into Date and Time Preferences and adjust.


Smart Text Formatting and Correcting on the Fly: Snow Leopard has a number of text-based enhancement for apps like Text Edit, iChat and Mail including spelling auto-correct, and text substitution, which lets you use shorter macros in place of longer words and phrases. The spell corrector is limited to commonly misspelled words, but the text substitution is yours to define. Just control-click in the text entry field for any of the aforementioned apps to toggle the features on or off, and visit the Text section of the Language & Text system pref for tweaking.


Password Log-In Delay: If you have password protection enabled for when your computer goes to sleep, you can now choose how long your computer snoozes before the password requirement actually kicks in. This means you can more easily have the privacy of a darkened monitor without the pain of having to key in your password every time you step away. These settings are under the Security preference pane.


Google and Yahoo Support in iCal: iCal is now much easier to add calendars from Google and Yahoo. No hacks or third-party software necessary. You just add a new account under preferences and select your service of choice. (Suit-wearers take note: Exchange support is here as well.)


Edit Videos in QuickTime X: QuickTime Pro users have long been able to edit and convert videos without launching the heavier movie apps. With QuickTime X, Apple has done away with that nasty fee. Yep, Pro is dead. Now everyone can trim and save, with a visual navigation timeline for easy edits, not to mention that other pro perk, viewing movies in full-screen.


Upload to YouTube From QuickTime X: Now you can upload directly to YouTube from QuickTime X. Just open any video file then go up to the menu bar and click Share. That same menu lets you upload movies directly to MobileMe, and convert movies to iProduct-friendly formats to send to iTunes.


QuickTime X Video Capture: How much do we love QuickTime X? It now also has video capture direct from the iSight camera, any FireWire video camera or any audio input. Better still, it can record the action happening on your screen, and save that as a movie too. A riveting one, to be sure.


Smarter Drive Eject: Half bug fix, half user enhancement, Snow Leopard now tells you exactly why it can’t eject a drive that’s in use. Instead of saying it’s just busy, it tells you what app is using it. Apple also promises ejecting in general is just “more reliable.”


Recover Trashed Files: If you accidentally sent an item to the trash that you want to replace, you don’t have to go in and then drag it to wherever you had it before (if you even remember). Now you just control-click on the trashed item and select “Put Back.” Problem solved.


Airport Signal Strength: Windows users have long been accustomed to this, but when you’re looking for free wi-fi to steal and wanna get an idea of what’s most reliable, you can now get an idea before you connect. It really took Apple this long to add this?


Automatic Time-Zone Detection: If you’re jet setting around the world with regularity, you can allow Snow Leopard to detect your location using Wi-Fi hotspots, and adjust the time zone—and clock’s time—accordingly.


Preview a File Inside Its Icon: If hitting the space bar for a “quick look” is too much for you, try the in-icon previews. Just roll your cursor over a video or audio file and a play button will appear. PDFs show arrows, letting you leaf through their pages. In most folders, there’s a slider that lets you scale icons up to a massive 512×512 pixels, presumably to make this file preview seem in any way rational.


Annotate This!: The increasingly useful Preview now has a bar at the bottom of the window full of various annotation tools, such as shapes, highlighter, memos, underline, strikeout and hyperlink. Useful for the bookworms out there who are deal with texts in digital formats. Perhaps it also hints at the Apple Tablet’s Preview app, because a device that goes up against a Kindle would need something like this (along with, you know, a five-day battery life).


Chinese Character Input: This isn’t really a feature the majority of us will use, but rather a demo of what’s possible with Apple input technology. You can use the trackpad to write Chinese characters and have them appear as computer text, just hit Ctrl-Shift-Space Bar. Pretty neat idea, and perhaps something else that might come in handy with a tablet.

There are, of course, even more tricks and new features. If you have any good ones you want to share, you know how to do it.

[Back to our Complete Guide to Snow Leopard]

Entelligence: Will Snow Leopard’s Exchange support earn Apple a new entourage?

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

Apple, Microsoft and the Mac have an interesting history: Microsoft was among the first developers for Macintosh, yet not long after, Apple would sue Microsoft for copying the look and feel of Mac OS in Windows. By the late 90s, Microsoft made a huge splash at Macworld with an announced 150 million dollar investment in Apple and promises of further development of Office and Internet Explorer for Macintosh. Office in particular was a major issue as it was a key requirement for business users. Early on, Office applications for Mac were far more advanced than their Windows counterparts. Excel was actually introduced for Mac users before Windows users could get their hands on it. But by the mid 90s, all that changed, the Mac versions of Office lagged behind Windows in terms of features and performance. It took forever to get things such as a common set of file formats, so that users of Office on the two different platforms could exchange documents with ease (it seems like something we take for granted but having managed and supported PC and Mac users in mixed shops, it was a nightmare to deal with). The latest version of Office for Mac, Office 2008 showed that Microsoft could produce top quality Macintosh software. I personally, think Office 2008 for Mac is the best version of the software that Microsoft has ever done (far better than Office 2007 for Windows, as it preserved the core part of the Mac UI while co-existing nicely with the ribbon UI). Obviously, however, a situation with such broad inconsistency is untenable.

Continue reading Entelligence: Will Snow Leopard’s Exchange support earn Apple a new entourage?

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Entelligence: Will Snow Leopard’s Exchange support earn Apple a new entourage? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 21:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Snow Leopard takes a bite out of support for legacy Palm OS devices

Still rocking that Palm Zire with your new Intel-based Mac? Then you might just want to reconsider that upgrade to Snow Leopard, as Apple has apparently decided to ditch its support for legacy Palm OS devices in the latest incarnation of iSync. That, as you may be aware, had previously acted as a conduit for Palm’s aging but still available Palm Desktop software, and let folks easily sync up their contacts and other data from their Centro, Treo, Zire, Tungsten, or even a venerable old PalmPilot. Of course, that doesn’t quite rise to the same level of controversy as the whole Pre / iTunes situation, especially considering that Palm itself has mostly moved on from said devices, and there are still some third-party sync solutions available for folks that want to keep the Palm OS dream alive.

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Snow Leopard takes a bite out of support for legacy Palm OS devices originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Aug 2009 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s Next-Gen OS ‘Snow Leopard’ Arriving Friday

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Apple’s next-generation operating system, Mac OS X Snow Leopard, is due for release Friday.

The company on Monday issued a press release detailing the operating system’s new features and improvements, which include the following:

  • A more responsive Finder
  • Mail that loads messages up to twice as fast
  • Time Machine with an up to 80 percent faster initial backup
  • a Dock with Exposé integration
  • QuickTime X with a redesigned player that allows users to easily view, record, trim and share video
  • a 64-bit version of Safari 4 that is up to 50 percent faster and resistant to crashes caused by plug-ins.

Also, Snow Leopard will free up to 7GB of hard drive space for upgrading Mac users once installed, according to Apple.

Available for pre-order, the Snow Leopard upgrade costs $30 for current Mac OS X Leopard users, $10 for customers who purchased a Mac after June 8, and $170 for those using older versions of Mac OS X (i.e. Tiger, OS X 10.4).

See our previous coverage of Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference for more tidbits on Mac OS X Snow Leopard.

See Also:

Press Release [Apple]


Entelligence: Stains on the sleeve of my operating system

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

I originally started this column on my take on what an Apple tablet might be (I literally dreamed about it and started to write it down when I woke up). I was really into it, which explains why I didn’t save it as I wrote. I think you can see where this is going.

Like a cartoon character who notices that he’s no longer standing on solid ground and suddenly begins to fall, I reached over to save, but was too late. My trusty XP install suddenly blue screened. Muttering just a few choice words, I rebooted, only to blue screen again. No problem, there’s always “safe mode.” Too bad safe mode blue screened as well. With little hope of getting anything recovered, I gave up, fired up my Mac and started from scratch. It’s not the first time this has happened to me, where for some reason or another I’ve lost work on my computer. I suspect it’s happened to a few of you out there too.

But this latest bad experience changed my thought process from Apple tablets to what’s wrong with the whole PC landscape and today’s operating systems.

Continue reading Entelligence: Stains on the sleeve of my operating system

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Entelligence: Stains on the sleeve of my operating system originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 18:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac OS X 10.5.8 now available, way less than 0.1 away from Snow Leopard

Apple’s just unleashed its latest 10.5 update on an unsuspecting (well, totally suspecting, actually) crowd, so go ahead and fire up Software Update and see if Cupertino’s left you any 10.5.8-flavored presents under the tree. We bet you didn’t expect Wednesday to be this amazingly, incredibly awesome, now, did you? Follow the break for the full changelog.

Continue reading Mac OS X 10.5.8 now available, way less than 0.1 away from Snow Leopard

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Mac OS X 10.5.8 now available, way less than 0.1 away from Snow Leopard originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 16:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac drivers for Clearwire WiMAX coming in August, Linux DIY code to follow

From August 17, a free download will contain all a Mac user will need to connect to Clearwire’s slowly expanding WiMAX empire. Well, there’s also the matter of a $79.99 Clear 4G+ USB modem, available from the beginning of the month, but you can rationalize that purchase by noting it can also hook up to Sprint’s 3G network. Once you’ve got those things, and you’ve paid your dues — $30 per month for mobile services — we’re sure they’ll finally let you in on the superfast mobile browsing party. Linux users have nothing to smile about here, unless they consider Clearwire CTO John Saw’s promise to release code from which to build their own drivers a reason to cheer.

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Mac drivers for Clearwire WiMAX coming in August, Linux DIY code to follow originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 10:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OS X Snow Leopard vs. Windows 7: The Final Countdown

It’s easier than ever to pit Windows 7 and OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard head-to-head: They’re launching soon, both within a month of each other—and both are basically glorified service packs of the current OS.

In way, they’re opposites: Windows 7 uses the same core foundation as Vista while fixing issues and prettying up the outside, while Snow Leopard keeps most of the same spots while re-arranging how things work internally. But the mission is the same—to evolve their current OS—not change the whole game. And launching this fall, we can’t avoid a comparison study. The stars of Redmond and Cupertino have never been so closely aligned before.

Price/Availability
Snow Leopard socks Windows 7 on both counts here: It’s shipping in September for just $29. Windows 7 doesn’t hit until Oct. 22, and we’ve heard it could be pricier than Vista, though it will, on the other hand, be cheaper for people who already have Vista. Nowhere near $29, we bet, but we can dream, can’t we?

Storage Footprint
Both Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are engineered to gobble less of your hard drive than their predecessors. Snow Leopard promises to give you back 6GB of storage—cutting out all the code for PowerPC-based Macs helped a lot there. Microsoft isn’t touting how much extra space you’ll have with Windows 7 vs. Vista, but an earlier version of Windows 7 used about 6GB of space, and they’ve been thinking about ways to make drivers take up less space.

If it says anything though, Snow Leopard requires 5GB of free disk space, while Windows 7 has a minimum recommended requirement of 16GB for the 32-bit OS and 20GB for the 64-bit OS—Microsoft doesn’t put out absolute bare minimums, though the footprint seems to be about 6-8GB for Windows 7.

Startup/Shutdown/Sleep
Windows 7 smoked Vista with sub-30-second startup times, and RC1 is even faster. Shutdowns are quicker too. We had problems with sleep in the beta release, but it still seemed better than Vista, if not faster. Apple doesn’t pimp a specific improvement in startup time, but promises doubletime wakeups and 1.75x faster shutdowns than Leopard.

64-bit
Windows 7 will come in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors—it’s up to you to pick the right one (hint: 64-bit). The majority of Windows 7 install will likely be 64-bit—since you don’t have to worry about compatibility issues as much as with Vista 64, and people are starting to want 4GB or more of RAM—so we’re at a tipping point there. Snow Leopard will also more or less finish up OS X’s transition to 64-bit, so it’s something Apple’s pushing hard as well.

Multicore Parallel Processing Powah
Some of the tweaks that Microsoft is making to the core of Windows 7 are to improve parallel processing—in short, using multiple cores to handle more simultaneous tasks than past versions of Windows. But these multicore-optimizing tweaks don’t seem as extensive as Apple’s parallel processing plans in Snow Leopard, headlined by what it calls Grand Central Dispatch.

What’s key about GCD is that if it works like Apple says, it’ll make easy for app developers to use multiple cores by handling threading for the programmers. The trick these says isn’t the hardware, it’s the software—the software tools that enable programmers to actually use multicore technology. (Just look back at our interview with Intel chair Craig Barrett, who explained why Intel hires more software engineers than hardware guys at this point.)

GPGPU—Processing Powah Continued
Again, since Snow Leopard is all about the plumbing, Apple’s being the loudest about how they plan to tap your graphics card for even more processing power. Using the OpenCL language, programmers can more easily tap the hundreds of cores lurking inside of your graphics card for applications that might have nothing to do with graphics. OpenCL is a big part of Snow Leopard, if you haven’t noticed. Snow Leopard will also use your graphics card for H.264 video acceleration (for smoother playback without overheating the CPU), if you’ve got a newer Mac with an Nvidia GeForce 9400M chipset.

Windows 7 also uses graphics cards more smartly than Vista—it has native GPU-accelerated transcoding and some other refinements in the graphics programming. But its big GPGPU push we’ll see a bit later when DirectX 11 launches in July.

Browser: Do You Want to Explore or Go on Safari?
Sorry guys, there’s not much of a contest here: Internet Explorer 8 is by far the best browser Microsoft has ever shipped, but when you consider it needs a compatibility list for all the sites coded for IE’s past shittiness, the real modern web standards support in Safari 4 gives this one to Safari without even considering the other features. It’s also wildly better than IE8 at handling JavaScript, which is pretty key in the age of web apps.

Networking
Networking is waaaaaaaay better in Windows 7 than it was in Vista—you can actually get to wireless networking with fewer than seventeen clicks, and the networking UI makes more sense. It also seems to be a little smarter at finding stuff on your network, at least in our experience. We’re still not totally sold on HomeGroups, but hey, Microsoft’s trying. And (sorta) easy remote streaming built into the OS? Pretty good.

Apple’s not really promoting any changes to networking in Snow Leopard beyond the metric that it’s 1.55 times faster at joining networks than Leopard it’s got more efficient filesharing. You could argue networking in Leopard didn’t need to be reworked—it was definitely better than Vista’s—but really, networking is one of those things that’s still not easy to understand for regular people in either OS.

How Long’s Your Battery Gonna Last?
Windows 7 supposedly improves notebook battery life by a minimum of 11 percent. On the Snow Leopard front, well, um, all of the new Macs have much bigger batteries? Since Apple didn’t drop a slide at WWDC telling the whole world, we can presume there isn’t any benefit.

So Much Media Playing
Windows Media Player will handle pretty much any kind of mainstream video or audio format you throw at it, be it H.264, Divx, Xvid or AAC. The UI is better too, but it still kinda sucks ’cause it’s trying to do too much (kind of like iTunes nowadays). But it has a few pretty great tricks, like “Play To,” that’ll command any compatible device on your network and stream stuff to it by way of the newest DLNA standard. Not to mention it’ll natively stream your whole library over the internets to anywhere. Oh yeah, and Windows Media Center still rocks.

Apple doesn’t get too specific on whether or not QuickTime X can now handle a broader range of formats with its fancy new logo, just that it’ll play “the latest modern media formats” like H.264 and AAC even more betterer. It’s also got a pretty classy new UI and supports graphics-accelerated playback (mentioned above). But maybe the best new feature is built-in video recording and trimming.

If all this talk of video codecs and file formats is confusing, read our (hopefully) helpful guide on the subject.

Backgrounds
Have you seen Windows 7 acid-trip backgrounds? Incredible. What’s Snow Leopard got? Some stupid purple star thing. Apple background designers needs more drugs, plz.

Backup/Backup Time
Time Machine is simply awesome because it’s so incredibly easy to use and implement. It’s 50 percent faster in Snow Leopard. Our only gripe is that it’s still all or nothing—a few built-in scheduling and content preferences wouldn’t hurt. Windows Backup and Restore is definitely improved in Windows 7, with finer control over backups and descriptions actually written in English.

Dock vs. Taskbar Round 3
Oh, this is a contentious one. We think Windows 7’s taskbar is pretty damn excellent and even said that it was useful than OS X’s dock thanks to Aero Peek, which lets you find any window in any app smoothly and instantly. Jump lists, which give you quick access to common functions right from the taskbar icon, were also a nice touch. In short, with these features and stuff like Aero Snap, more usable previews, and Aero Peek mixing it up with Alt+Tab, Windows 7 has the best UI of any Windows yet.

Snow Leopard’s UI is mostly the same, but it manages to improve on one of its best features—Exposé—and the Dock at the same time. You can actually do a whole lot more stuff from the Dock now, so you can easily drop files in whatever app window you want to. Exposé, my “I would die without it” feature in Leopard, now arranges windows in a neat grid, rather than scattering them across whatever space is available. Stacks is actually useful now too, since they’re scrollable and you can look in folders within stacks in Snow Leopard.

Exchange Support
Snow Leopard’s got it built-in, your copy of Windows 7 doesn’t. Freaky but true.

Overall Snap Crack and Pop
Both Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are designed to be faster, leaner, stronger and more stable than the OSes they’re building on. Windows 7 is markedly more responsive, and you simply feel like you’re more in control. We’ll have to see with Snow Leopard, but if it lives up to Apple’s promises, we’re definitely looking forward to the performance prowess.

There’ s a whole lot that goes into deciding whether you’re a Mac or PC, but whatever one you pick, you definitely won’t go wrong upgrading your OS this fall.