Articles tagged Lion.

MacBook Air Performance Face Off

August 12, 2011 15:40 by: Karl Johnson   0 Comments

Categories: MacBook , Review

Tagged: GeekBench , Lion , MacBook Air , Solid State Drive

The New Macbook Airs have been out for a couple of weeks, so it is time to check their performance scores and see how they compare with previous models and other MacBooks.

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Mac Mini Update - Pro & Lion Server

June 11, 2011 14:38 by: E. Werner Reschke   0 Comments

Categories: Mac Pro , Predictions , Products

Tagged: Lion , Mac Mini , Thunderbolt

Mac Mini

With the the demise of the XServe and the abnormal delay since the last Mac Mini refresh (12 months — the average has been eight), many continue to wonder where Apple is with replacements for both products. 

While there is a Mac Mini Server running Snow Leopard, what if Apple were to take the next step and create a Mac Mini Pro Server?

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Microsoft's Next Purchase: Dropbox

June 9, 2011 17:15 by: E. Werner Reschke   1 Comment

Categories: iPad , iPhone , Jobs, Steve Jobs , Mac Applications , Products

Tagged: Apple , Drop_Box , iOS , iOS_5 , Lion , Microsoft

With Apple's announcement of OS X Lion, iOS 5 and iCloud, Ballmer and the Redmond collective must be picking themselves off the floor trying to figure out what just happened.

Alas, not all is lost for Microsoft — if they follow my simple advise. Well, thinking about that again, the chance Microsoft might listen to reason instead of the Windows/Office juggernaut is slim to none —and slim left town!

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WWDC 2011: Three Things To Watch For

May 31, 2011 13:41 by: E. Werner Reschke   0 Comments

Categories: iOS Applications , Mac Applications , Predictions , Products

Tagged: 2011 , iOS5 , Lion , Steve Jobs , WWDC

Is it June already? Well not quite, but certainly close enough to really start sinking our teeth into what we will find at the WWDC in 2011.

Having personally attended several Mac trade-shows back in the day (not any recently since Apple has canceled such events), the anticipation for Steve or "JobsCo" to reveal something new is no different this time around. Matter of fact one can argue the stakes are even higher with so many more irons in the fire.

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Podcast: Episode 43 - The Caboose is off the Tracks

April 2, 2011 17:40 by: E. Werner Reschke   0 Comments

Categories: Podcasts

Tagged: Amazon , iOS , iPad-2 , LePad , Lion , WWDC

Recorded March 29, 2011. Download | Subscribe | View Other Podcasts | Show Notes

Topics include: WWDC, iOS 5 and OS X Lion, iPad 2 lines, LePad by Lenovo, Amazon Cloud Drive, MobileMe direction, Windows 7 to overtake iOS? and more.

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MacBook Pro’s Next Step

March 28, 2011 07:09 by: Mark Reschke   0 Comments

Categories: Jobs, Steve Jobs , Products , Review , Rumors

Tagged: 10.7 , Jobs , Lion , MacBookAir , MacBookPro , MBAir , OSX

October 2010 came roaring in like a Lion — well, for Mac OS X fans that is. Once again Steve Jobs took center stage for a Keynote presentation that focused on the Mac. He and his executive team announced and demoed a few upcoming features in Lion, Mac OS X 10.7.

Alongside of the software hoopla Steve also introduced an update to the MacBook Air. Faster, better memory, better storage, better display, better battery life and more affordable. However, there was one line during his keynote that still rattles in my brain — like a tune you hear in the grocery store and then can't get out of your head. Steve said this is "...the new MacBook Air… we think it is the future of notebooks."

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Lion’s Secrets

November 29, 2010 08:23 by: E. Werner Reschke   9 Comments

Categories: Predictions , Products , Rumors

Tagged: App Store , Dock , Finder , iOS , Keynote , Lion , OS X 10.7 , Steve Jobs

When Steve Jobs introduced us to Lion (OS X 10.7) back in October, there were a few items that were certainly interesting to note:

  • App Store was a Lion Feature but will be available four-five months before Lion is released — We should mark our calendars for January 20th, which will be 90 days since Jobs' announcement. Will Apple will release iWork 11 on that date and make it available only via the App Store? Expect Apple to move this way to make their Apple Store shelves less filled with software (I mean how many iPhone Apps can you buy at an Apple Store? Answer: Zero) and more filled with accessories and Mac/iPhone gear that is tangible.
  • Lion is a move away from the Finder — The Finder was Apple's original way of helping us technical neophytes understand directory structures and files. It is clear that Steve wants to move to the next step which is to make us less dependent on files and where they are stored. Instead we are just use them in the appropriate application. For example, think of Mail.app. Do you deal with files per se? No, you are dealing with an App called Mail.app and it helps you organize "files" called E-mails. A better example is iPhoto. Few of us rarely ever see the actual files in iPhoto but instead manipulating those files through the application. Never must one go to ~/Pictures/iPhoto Library/ and so on. My bet is Steve would like to make our computing day file-and-directory-structure-free. Apps just handle everything for us, in a more useful way.
  • Lion is a move away from the Dock — We were introduced to the Dock (in its current form) with OS X 10.0 (sure there were previews of it in OS 9 and 8). But the Dock is limiting. There are only so many items one can fit on the Dock until it becomes so small that you need a magnifying glass to understand what is in there. You should see Mark (Guy #1's) dock. It is so small and so busy, only he can use his computer. If you think about it, the iOS has a dock, but it is far more flexible and far more customizable... yes the main screens (or windows) we swipe through to find,.... what? Apps. See the previous point. Apps become center stage and Lion will make this more evident.
  • Lion will make files, not apps, cloud-centric — In Lion expect to see that auto-save also means auto-save to the cloud. For those of you who use IMAP as your e-mail protocol or MobileMe (based on IMAP), you can quickly picture how all files could work that way — not just e-mail. This makes sense with Apple's massive data center in North Carolina. So with Lion I can work on a presentation, then continue when I get on the plane with my iPad.... because all files are synced (like IMAP e-mail). Apps on the other hand are not. They must be installed on each device. In the future, I'm sure if you buy an app for the Mac (through the App Store) it will also have an iOS flavor as well (like iWork does).

A lot more is in-store for us with Lion. Steve said he only had a limited amount of time to share with us some key features. What I think that really meant is he wasn't quite ready to reveal the massive change (and improvements) Lion will bring to our computing lives. Lion will be the next giant step away from computing as we have known it for the past 25 years.

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