Mac OS X Special Price
Tuesday, February 2nd, 201005th of February 2012
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Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard specifications:
Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard Description:
Mac OS X is the world’s most advanced operating system. Built on a rock solid UNIX foundation and intended to be simple and intuitive, it is what makes the Mac groundbreaking, greatly secure, matched, and easy to use. Quite simply there’s nothing else like it. In ways big and small, Mac OS X Snow Leopard makes your Mac faster, more dependable, and easier to use. Click to expand. Mac OS X. It is what makes a Mac a Mac.
Power of UNIX. Simplicity of the Mac.
Mac OS X is both easy to use and very powerful. Everything from the desktop you see when you start up your Mac to the applications you use every day is intended with simplicity and elegance in mind. So if you are browsing the web, checking your email, or video chatting with a friend on another continent, to get things done is now easy to learn, easy to perform, and fun to do. Of course, making amazing things simple takes seriously advanced technologies, and Mac OS X is filled with them. Not only is it built on a rock solid, time tested UNIX foundation that gives unparalleled stability, it also delivers unbelievable performance, stunning graphics, and industry leading support for Internet standards. Perfect integration of hardware and software.
Since the software on every Mac is produced by the same company that makes the Mac itself, you get an integrated system in which everything works together perfectly. The advanced technologies in the operating system take full benefit of the 64 bit, multicore processors and GPUs to deliver the greatest possible performance. The fitted iSight camera works seamlessly with the iChat software so you may be able to start a video chat with a click. Your Mac notebook will include a Multi Touch trackpad that supports pinching, swiping, and other gestures. And the OS communicates with the hardware to deliver unbelievable battery life by spinning down the hard drive when it is inactive, by intelligently deciding if the CPU or GPU is best for a task, and by automatically dimming the screen in low light conditions. Elegant interface and stunning graphics.
The most striking feature of a Mac is its elegant user interface, made possible by graphics technologies that are constructed to leverage the advanced graphics processor in your Mac. These technologies supply the power for things like multiway chatting, real time reflections, and smooth animations. Fonts on the screen look beautiful and very readable. A soft drop shadow makes it clear at a glance which window is active and which ones are in the background. You may be able to preview just about any kind of file using fast Look, and because the previews are high resolution, you may be able to really read the text. Fitted support for the PDF format means you may be able to view or create PDFs from nearly any application in the system. Highly secure by design.
Mac OS X does not get PC viruses. And with virtually no effort on your part, Mac OS X protects itself from other malicious applications. It was built for the Internet in the Internet age, offering a range of sophisticated technologies that help keep you safe from online threats. Because every Mac comes with a secure configuration, you do not have to worry about understanding complex settings. Better, it will not slow you down with constant security alerts and sweeps. And Apple responds quickly to online threats and automatically delivers security updates straight to your Mac. Built for compatibility.
The versatility and power of Mac OS X make it matched in nearly any environment, as well as Windows networks. It works with virtually all of today’s digital cameras, printers, and other peripherals without the have to manually download separate drivers. It opens liked file types like JPG, MP3, and Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint papers. Also, Mac OS X will include fitted support for the industry standard PDF format, so you may be able to read and create PDFs from nearly any application in the system perfect for sharing work with colleagues if they use a Mac or a PC. If you want to run Windows on your Mac, you may be able to do that, too. And Mac OS X Snow Leopard is the only operating system with fitted support for the new variant of Microsoft Exchange Server, so you may be able to use your Mac at home and at work and have all your messages, meetings, and contacts in one place. Innovation for everyone.
Mac OS X comes standard with a large range of assistive technologies that help people with disabilities experience what the Mac has to offer including many features you will not find in other operating systems at any price. As an example, the fitted VoiceOver screen reading technology makes it possible for those who are blind or have low vision to control their computer using key commands or gestures on a Multi Touch trackpad. Mac OS X also offers out of the box support for over 40 braille displays, as well as Bluetooth displays, and many other accessibility features, like dynamic full screen magnification, playback of closed captions, and a scalable screen. Reliable to the core.
The core of Mac OS X is built on the same ultrareliable UNIX foundation that powers industrial strength servers, helping to ensure that your computing experience remains free from system crashes and compromised performance. Upgrading your Mac to the next variant of Mac OS X is dependable and easy. It checks your applications to be sure they are matched and sets on the side any programs recognized to be incompatible. If a power outage interrupts your installation, it can start again without losing any data. Best of all, upgrading does not require reformatting your drive, you may be able to keep all your matched applications, files, and settings. And if something goes wrong when you are using your Mac, Time Machine is there to keep auto backups of everything on your drive. Fully shown, completely loaded.
Mac OS X comes in a single, full featured variant that will include a big group of beautifully intended applications. They not only let you surf the web, conduct video and text chats, manage your contacts, and accomplish other day to day tasks they also work together to make you more productive and let you have more fun. The Finder makes working with your files and papers as easy as browsing your iTunes library. Click to expand. Dock + Finder
The Dock in Mac OS X gives fast, one click access to usually used applications, folders, files, and downloads from the Internet. The Finder makes working with your files and papers as easy as browsing your iTunes library. What is the Dock?
The Dock at the bottom of the screen gives you fast access to your most usually used applications, files, and folders. With its visually appealing, high resolution icons, the Dock practically begs to be clicked. When you do, your applications spring to life instantly, and a bright signal tells you which applications are open. You may also use Exposé, from the Dock to instantly see all the open windows for an application. You may be able to set the Dock to remain at the bottom of the screen, framing your desktop picture and generally observable. Or you may be able to set it to tuck itself away, prepared to return when you move the pointer to the bottom of the screen. The sidebar in the Finder window is your starting point when browsing your Mac. The Dock at the bottom of the screen gives you fast access to your most usually used applications and files. Click to expand. Mac OS X helps you navigate everything on your Mac visually with an novelty called Cover Flow. Click to expand. What’s in your Dock.
The Dock comes loaded with icons for many of the applications included with your Mac Dashboard, Mail, iCal, iPhoto, and so on. But as you’d expect, it is easy to customize. To add a new application or folder, just grab it from the Finder and move it onto the Dock. The Dock expands to make room for the new item, and if you have many of things, the icons scale to fit on your desktop. Removing and rearranging things is just as simple: Click and drag. Stacks for your stuff
A stack is a Dock item that gives you fast, direct access to folders and files. When you click a stack, the files inside spring from the Dock in a fan or a grid, based on the number of things or the preference you set. Mac OS X starts you off with premade stacks for downloads, applications, and papers. The Downloads stack automatically captures files you download from Safari, Mail, and iChat. The Applications stack gives you fast access to all your applications. And the papers stack is a great place to keep things like presentations, spreadsheets, and word processing files. The files in each stack can appear as big icons that preview their contents, so it is easy to find the right one before you click. Stacks are scrollable, so you may be able to easily view all things, and you may be able to navigate through folders in a stack to see all the files inside the stack. Create as many stacks as you wish simply by dragging folders to the right side of your Dock. All new: Exposé, in the Dock.
With Exposé, now integrated into the Dock, you may be able to view the open windows of a specific application with a click. Just click and hold any application icon in the Dock, and Exposé, tiles the open windows of that application while causing the windows of other applications to fade away. The clutter cleared, you may be able to easily find the document you need. A click makes it the active window, and pressing the Space bar gives you a full screen preview of the window. That is not all you may be able to do with Exposé, in the Dock. When you drag a file onto a Dock icon, all the application’s open windows pop up, so you may be able to place the file in the right window perfect if you want to attach a document to an email message. Introducing the Finder.
The Finder is like home base for your Mac. Represented by the blue icon with the smiling face, it is one of the 1st things you see when you start working on your Mac. It allows you to manage and access practically everything on your Mac, as well as applications, files, folders, discs, and shared drives on your network. You may also see rich, high quality previews of the contents of your files. The Finder takes full benefit of the advanced technologies in Mac OS X such as 64 bit support and great Central Dispatch so it responds more quickly to your actions. Meet the sidebar.
The sidebar in the Finder window is your starting point when browsing your Mac. If you have used iTunes, you will feel right at home. Like iTunes, the sidebar is organized into groups to make it simple to find your stuff frequently accessed folders, CDs and DVDs, computers on your local network, and so on. With some clicks, you are on your way to finding what you need. The sidebar includes a useful Search For section. It uses Spotlight search to let you quickly find files you have changed today, yesterday, or in the past week, or find all pictures, movies, or papers. Just click one of the folders and you will see an up to the minute list of files. And just like the Dock, you may be able to customize the sidebar with your search folders. Instant networking.
Any Mac or PC on your home network automatically appears in the sidebar, allowing you to easily share files between them and use Spotlight search and Cover Flow to search the other computers. And when you click a connected Mac, you may be able to use screen sharing, which allows you to see and control another Mac as if you sitted in front of it useful, as an example, when you want to show someone how to use an application or feature. See your files in Cover Flow.
Mac OS X helps you navigate everything on your Mac visually with an novelty called Cover Flow. Using Cover Flow, you may be able to flip through your papers as easily as you flip through music in iTunes or bookmarks in Safari 4. Each file is displayed as a big preview of its 1st page, so you may be able to really see the contents of a document before opening it. Three more ways to view.
You may also see your files in list view, which allows you to easily sort them in different ways, as well as by file name, date changed, or file type. You may be able to see them in column view, which allows you to navigate through many folders quickly. And you may be able to see them as big icons, up to 512 by 512 pixels in size. Icon view allows you to thumb through a multipage document or watch a QuickTime movie right in the Finder, an easy way to find and view your stuff. Exposé, unshuffles overlapping windows on your desktop into an organized thumbnail view, so you may be able to quickly find and switch to any window or get to any file on the desktop. Click to expand. Exposé,
Instantly view all open windows in stunning style with a single keystroke. Exposé, unshuffles overlapping windows on your desktop into an organized thumbnail view, so you may be able to quickly find and switch to any window or get to any file on the desktop. From chaos to order.
If you like to work with many applications and papers simultaneously, you most likely use up time each day poking through your open windows just to uncover the one you need now. Would not it be great if all you had to do was press one key to snap all of that window chaos into order? That is exactly what Exposé, does. With one keystroke, Exposé, instantly tiles all your open windows, scales them down, and neatly arranges them, so you may be able to see what is in every single one. And you certainly can see each one, because Exposé, preserves the visual quality of the window in its reduced size. To see a full screen preview, just press the Space bar. That is not all. Move from one tiled window to the next and you will see its title displayed at the bottom of the window. When you find the window you need, just click it. Magically, every window returns to full size, and the window you clicked whether it is a folder, a PDF, a QuickTime movie, or a Word document becomes the active window. Return to your desktop.
There is another feature in Exposé,. Press one key to push all the windows on the side, giving you instant access to your desktop. Once you grab what you need, another keypress brings all the windows back. Want to open a document? Check to see if the CD or DVD you are burning in the background is ready? Or quickly find and drag a file into an email as an enclosure? Exposé, makes it simple. All new: Exposé, in the Dock.
Exposé, not only tiles all your open windows, it also allows you to view the open windows of a specific application. As an example, say you are a Keynote maestro and frequently have up to a dozen papers open simultaneously. Exposé, makes finding the one you need very easy. Just click and hold the Keynote icon in the Dock, and Exposé, tiles your Keynote windows while causing the windows of other applications to fade away. The clutter cleared, you may be able to easily find the document you need. A click makes it the active window, and pressing the Space bar gives you a full screen preview of the window. Favor keyboard shortcuts? You may be able to tile application windows with a keystroke, too. And that is not all you may be able to do with Exposé, in the Dock. When you drag a file onto a Dock icon, all the application’s open windows pop up, so you may be able to place the file in the right window perfect if you want to attach a document to an email message. Instantly preview the contents of your papers without ever opening them. Quick Look
Instantly preview the contents of your papers without ever opening them. Flip through multipage PDFs, watch full screen video, view photo slideshows, and more. With a single click. Opening files is so last year.
Fast Look is the groundbreaking technology that gives you a sneak peek of complete files even multiple page papers and video without opening them. All you must do is choose a file in the Finder and press the Space bar. An elegant transparent window appears, showing you the contents of the file instantly. It is great when you are looking for something particular but do not have time to open lots of files to find it. See everything.
Fast Look works with almost every file on your system, as well as pictures, text files, PDF papers, movies, Keynote presentations, Mail attachments, and Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files. To see a file in fast Look, you simply tap the Space bar or click the fast Look icon in the Finder window. You may be able to view the file in full screen, and you may be able to open the application that produced it with a double click. Best of all, fast Look works if you do not have the application that produced it perfect when a colleague sends you a document that you could not otherwise open. A fast Look back in time.
You may be able to use fast Look to your advantage when you are searching for files to restore in Time Machine. Once you find the file you are looking for, use fast Look to verify its contents before restoring it to the desktop. View attachments, no detachment.
Fast Look also works in the Mail and iChat applications in Mac OS X. Say you get a message with a bunch of attachments. Instead of downloading and opening every one, you may be able to use fast Look to see them with a click. It is great for looking at PDFs, Microsoft Office papers, and other files. You may be able to view attached photos as a slideshow and add them to your iPhoto library with ease. With Spotlight, you may be able to find anything on your computer as quickly as you type: files, email, contacts, pictures, calendar events, and applications. Click to expand. In addition to the Finder, Spotlight search technology is built into other applications in Mac OS X: Mail, Address Book, iCal, System Preferences, Preview, Safari. Spotlight
With Spotlight, you may be able to find anything on your computer as quickly as you type: files, email, contacts, pictures, calendar events, and applications. And because it is built into the core of Mac OS X, search results update instantly whenever files change. Stop looking, start finding.
Spotlight is the lightning fast search technology built into Mac OS X that makes it simple to find what you are looking for, if you do not know where to look. Conveniently available in the Mac OS X menu bar, the Spotlight search field gives you instant results as you start typing, encompassing not only files, folders, and papers but also messages in Mail, contacts in Address Book, iCal calendars, things in System Preferences, applications, and dictionary meanings. Spotlight searches are not confined to your computer you may also search other computers on the network. The need for speed.
Built into the core of Mac OS X, Spotlight delivers results so quickly because it indexes files on your computer in the background, so you never experience lag times or slowdowns. And when you make a change, like adding a new file, email, or contact, Spotlight updates its index automatically, so search results are generally up to the moment correct. Searching with smarts.
When you search with Spotlight, you are really accessing a complete, constantly updated index that sees all the metadata inside supported files the “what, when, and who” of every part of info saved on your Mac including the kind of content, the author, edit history, format, size, and many more details. Most document types, as well as Microsoft Word papers, Adobe Photoshop pictures, and email, already contain rich metadata. And because Spotlight indexes content also, your search results include what appears inside a file or document, not just its title. When you click the document, you’re now taken to that spot in the document with the search terms highlighted. Smartly organized.
Thanks to the speed and flexibility of Spotlight, you will discover many new ways to manage your files. You may be able to save the results of a search as a Smart Folder that automatically updates as you add, change, or remove papers on your Mac. Smart Folders contain files grouped together depending on search requirements instead of physical place, so the same file can appear in many Smart Folders without moving from its original saved place on your system. No have to copy, shift, or update files: Spotlight Smart Folders keep everything organized for you. It’s in the Mail. And more.
Also to the Finder, Spotlight search technology is built into other applications in Mac OS X: Mail, Address Book, iCal, System Preferences, Preview, Safari. No matter which application you search, results appear now after you start typing some letters. And your search is customizable. In Mail, as an example, you may be able to search in selected mailboxes or across all of them, and in individual fields To, From, Subject or complete messages. In Address Book, you may be able to search the complete list or individual groups. With its simple, elegant interface and support for the new Internet standards, Safari gets out of your way and allows you to enjoy the web. Safari 4
Experience the web with the fast, easy to use web browser. With its simple, elegant interface and support for the new Internet standards, Safari gets out of your way and allows you to enjoy the web. Surf fast.
Safari four in Snow Leopard outraces all other browsers. On the most calling for Web 2.0 applications, Safari delivers blazingly fast performance using the new Nitro Engine. As an example, thanks to 64 bit technology in Snow Leopard, JavaScript performance in Safari four is up to 50 faster than the 32 bit variant of Safari. Also, Safari offers top flight HTML performance the best on any platform loading pages up to three times faster than Internet Explorer eight and nearly three times faster than Firefox 3.5. What does all that mean for you? Less time loading pages and more time enjoying them. Distraction free browsing.
Safari sports a clean, elegant look that keeps your concentrate where it belongs: on the content of the web page. The features you use most are just a click away, and an integrated Google search bar makes it simple to find what you are looking for. Crash tolerant.
Safari four in Snow Leopard is more tolerant to crashes. It turns out that the number one cause of crashes in Mac OS X is browser plug ins. So Apple engineers redesigned Safari to make plug ins run individually from the browser. If a plug in crashes on a web page, Safari keeps running. Just refresh the page and get going again. Flip through history.
Safari four offers a dramatic way to revisit your browsing history. Just type a word or phrase in the History Search field in Top Sites, and Safari quickly presents you with full page previews of the websites that look exactly as they did when you last visited them. You flip through them just like in Cover Flow in iTunes or the Finder, then click to access the page you want. See your Top Sites.
The new Top Sites feature allows you to enjoy a stunning, at a glance preview of your beloved websites without lifting a finger. Safari four tracks the sites you browse and ranks your favorites, presenting up to 24 thumbnails on a single page and making them available with just a click. You may be able to customize the display by pinning a favorite site to a particular place in the grid. And a star in the upper right of each thumbnail indicates if a site has new content since the last time you visited. Surf securely.
With support for the new standards for secure access and info sharing on the web, Safari protects you if you are browsing the Internet at home or on a public computer. Safari offers fitted antiphishing technology that detects fake websites and warns you before showing the info. It also supports EV Extended Validation Certificates, so you may be able to feel confident shopping, updating account info, or paying bills online. Kid proof the Internet.
Start your kids’ web exploration off on the right foot with Safari parental controls. Using the same technology that keeps your inbox free of junk mail, a content filter in Mac OS X takes a fast peek at websites before they load and tries to find out if they are suited for kids. If they are not, Mac OS X blocks them from view. You may be able to override this filter by creating lists of particular websites you want or do not want your kids to see. Mail offers an elegant user interface that makes it simple to manage all your email from a single, ad free inbox, when you are not connected to the Internet. Click to expand. Mail, iCal, Address Book
Three fitted applications that work as one: Mail, iCal, and Address Book bring the power of Mac OS X to your email, calendar, and contacts. You get elegant, easy to use interfaces, lightning fast searches, and complete integration across the applications and your Mac. Mail: All your email accounts in one place.
Intended from the ground up exactly for email, Mail offers an elegant user interface that makes it simple to manage all your email from a single, ad free inbox, when you are not connected to the Internet. It works with most email standards including POP3 and IMAP and most liked email services, like Gmail, ! Mail, and AOL Mail. If you have more than one email account, no problem. Just add all your accounts to Mail and you will be able to access everything from one central place. Microsoft Exchange Server Support
With Snow Leopard, Mac OS X is the only operating system with fitted support for the new variant of Microsoft Exchange Server. So you may be able to use your Mac with all the features and applications you love at home and at work and have all your messages, meetings, and contacts in one place. Data, detected.
Mail does more than just show email. It also analyzes the contents to assist you act on them. Say you get an email inviting you to dinner at Gino’s Pizza tomorrow at six p.M. Mail not only recognizes that six p.M. Is the time, it knows that “tomorrow” represents a date on a calendar. So you may be able to add the invitation to your iCal calendar by clicking the date, if it is an real date October 18 or a relative date tomorrow. It also knows that Gino’s is a place, so you may be able to click the address to view a Google map of the restaurant’s place. And if the message will include a phone number or email address, you may be able to add it to deal with Book with just a click. Filtering the junk.
Mail will include an intelligent mail filter that automatically catches messages it thinks are junk. Junk mail is placed in a special folder in Mail so it does not clog up your inbox. If a junk message gets through, simply click the Junk button, and from then on, alike email will be placed in the Junk folder. The more you train Mail to recognize junk mail, the better it gets. Address Book: One place for all your contacts.
Address Book gives you a adaptable and convenient place to store contact info for your family, friends, and colleagues. You may be able to import info from other applications, create distribution lists for clubs and groups, print address labels and envelopes, and more. Because Address Book is built on the industry standard vCard format for storing contact info, your friends can send you cards that you may add to your list by dropping them in no typing obliged. Do more with your addresses.
Address Book does more than display card contents, it also allows you to use them. Click an address to ask the web for a Google map showing the place. Click a URL to open the web site. Click an email address to instantly send a message or start an iChat conversation. ICal: A powerful desktop calendar.
ICal makes it simple to keep track of your busy schedule. You may be able to create as many separate calendars as you need one for home, another for school, a 3rd for work, and so on. You may be able to see all your calendars in a single window or decide to see only the calendars you want. RSVP you.
With iCal, you may be able to invite friends and family to events. ICal allows you to create invitations using contact info from your Address Book, update your guest list, keep track of attendee responses, and get the new position info. A centralized notice box keeps all your invitations and responses in one easy to access place so you may be able to manage events in iCal instead of your busy email inbox. And when you or another Mac user receives an iCal invitation in Mail, it is automatically added to iCal. Find what you need.
Thanks to Spotlight, it is easy to find info in Mail, iCal, and Address Book. Inside the applications, a search kinds through everything all fields in an email, all info on a card or appointment so you find every possible match. If you are not using the applications, you may be able to still find messages, contacts, and appointments by using Spotlight search in the menu bar. Start typing a search term and Spotlight returns the related things now. Smart Groups and Smart Mailboxes.
Spotlight technology helps you manage your mail and contacts in another big way: Smart Groups and Smart Mailboxes. You simply choose the relevant criteria say, every contact with a birthday in the next 30 days or every email sent by your boss and your applications create a folder containing every item that meets your requirements. Best of all, the folders stay updated as new things are produced. Smart Groups in Address Book appear in your Group list, and Smart Mailboxes in Mail appear just below your inboxes. Fully integrated.
Because they are Mac OS X applications, Mail, iCal, and Address Book are completely integrated with each other and with other features of your Mac. As an example, Mail and iCal use the contacts in your Address Book, so you may be able to quickly send messages or invitations to persons and groups. Mail can access your iPhoto library, so it is easy to email pictures to your friends and family. If you get an attachment, Mail allows you to use fast Look to view its contents without saving the attachment and opening another application. Syncing included.
Part of what makes Address Book and iCal so powerful is seamless syncing. They can sync the contact and calendar info on your Mac with your iPhone or another mobile phone, PDA, or iPod touch, so it follows you everywhere. And with a MobileMe account, your contacts and calendars stay up to date across many Mac computers and on the web, so you may be able to access your info from any computer with an Internet connection. IChat is a rich instant messaging application that works on the AIM network and makes it simple to stay in touch with friends and family using text and video, if they are on a Mac or a PC. Click to expand. IChat
Included with Mac OS X, iChat is a rich instant messaging application that works with your AIM or MobileMe account and makes it simple to stay in touch with friends and family using text and video, if they are on a Mac or a PC. IM me.
A powerful instant text messaging application, iChat comes with Mac OS X and is filled with great features that make sending messages to your AIM or MobileMe buddies fast and easy. Simple text chats feel like natural conversations, with icons and thought bubbles that make it simple to see who’s saying what. And you may be able to transmit any kind of file from a web address to a photo by simply dragging it into your chat. Pictures display right in the message window, web links open in a browser with a click. In short, iChat is the best way to IM. Don’t just type it say it face to face.
Most Mac computers include a fitted iSight camera and mic. When you use them with iChat, you get the simplest way to have high quality video and audio chats with your friends and family. You may be able to chat with just one other person or make it a party by starting a multiway chat. Featuring a three dimensional view, iChat practically puts everybody in the room with you. View their faces reflected into space, just as if they sitted around a conference room table. And with video backdrops built into iChat, you may be able to make it appear like you are chatting from the Eiffel Tower, under the sea, or your custom backdrop. Click to start.
With its intuitive interface, iChat shows you when your buddies are available for a chat. Bright icons point to their online position and if they are able of a video chat or just audio. To start a chat, click the camera or phone icon to send an invitation. To add more people, click the icons for the meeting attendees on your friend list and each colleague steps into your virtual office. Show off slideshows from anywhere.
Why wait for a unlit room and a projector to present vacation photos or Keynote slides? Now you may be able to do it all remotely, right in iChat. Put on a photo slideshow, click through a Keynote presentation, or play a movie in full screen, accompanied by a video feed of you hosting while your friend looks on. Share and share alike.
Thanks to iChat screen sharing, you and your friend can watch and control a single desktop, so you may be able to easily collaborate with a colleague, browse the web with a friend, or pick plane seats with your spouse. Share your desktop or your buddy’s you both have control at all times. IChat initiates an audio chat when you start a screen sharing session, so you may be able to talk things through while you are at it. Child’s play.
With iChat at home, you may be able to enforce your “no talking to strangers” rule using parental controls that let you to choose who your kids can chat with online. Support the buddies you trust and iChat blocks all tries to send and get IMs with anybody else. IChat also automatically hides or displays online position so that only buddies accepted by you may be able to see if your kids are online. Entertainment made easy. Click to expand. ITunes
ITunes plays all your digital music and video. It syncs content to your iPod, iPhone, and Apple TV. And it is an entertainment superstore that stays open 24/7. Entertainment made easy.
Forget rifling through stacks of CDs or flipping through channels. ITunes puts your complete music and video collection a mere click away, giving you an all access pass to thousands of hours of digital entertainment. Browse. Manage. Play. All from your Mac or PC. Browse.
View your library by artist, album, episode, year, rating any way you want. A fast search reveals results as you type. Organize.
Turn CDs into digital music by importing them to iTunes. Manage your complete collection with custom playlists. Play.
Shuffle songs to mix up your groove. Listen to music from other computers on your network. Play video using onscreen controls. Everything, to go.
You have music and video in iTunes. You have photos, contacts, and calendars on your computer. You want to get it all on your iPod or iPhone. ITunes syncing does exactly that. And wireless syncing to Apple TV puts music and video from your iTunes library on the big screen. The world’s #1 online music store and more.
ITunes is an application that plays all your digital music, podcasts, and videos. It syncs content to your iPod, iPhone, and Apple TV. And it is a 24/7 entertainment superstore that allows you to browse and purchase over ten million songs, rent or purchase blockbuster movies, get HD episodes of your beloved TV shows, download applications for your iPhone or iPod touch, subscribe to free podcasts, and shop for audiobooks. A brand new variant of QuickTime Player, the application used by millions to watch a large range of video formats and files. Click to expand. QuickTime X
Watch pristine quality video in a clean, uncluttered window. Record and trim your movies. And easily share them over the web. A beautiful new player.
Totally redesigned in Mac OS X Snow Leopard, QuickTime X debuts a brand new variant of QuickTime Player, the application used by millions to watch a large range of video formats and files. Using the power of the Core Animation technology in Mac OS X, QuickTime Player offers a clean, uncluttered interface with controls that fade out when they are not needed. And big thumbnail pictures make navigating chaptered movies simpler than before. Instead of text only chapter names, QuickTime Player displays frame based thumbnail pictures for each chapter marker, so it is easy to navigate your chaptered media. Trim your media.
The new QuickTime Player allows you to trim your media to the ideal length by removing unwanted portions from the beginning or end. Rather than relying on a simple timeline, it displays frame based thumbnails that assist you make the perfect edit. Share with iTunes and the web.
QuickTime Player changes your personal media files for use by iTunes and your iPhone, iPod, or Apple TV, using the best settings for each destination. After conversion, QuickTime Player automatically delivers the content to your iTunes library. You may also use QuickTime Player to publish your media to MobileMe or YouTube without worrying about formats or resolutions. Record with a click.
QuickTime Player makes it simple to catch live audio and video directly from your fitted iSight camera, FireWire camcorder, or microphone. Just click the Record button in QuickTime Player and start recordcapturing your audio or video to disk. You may also catch the action on your screen with screen recording perfect for creating instructional media or when you want to show a friend how to do something. Built for high quality and smooth playback.
QuickTime X is optimized for the new media formats such as H.264 and AAC through a new media architecture that delivers stutter free playback of high definition content on almost all Snow Leopard based Mac systems. QuickTime X maximizes the efficiency of modern media playback by using the graphics processor to scale and display video. It more increases efficiency by behind GPU accelerated video decoding of H.264 files. And QuickTime X takes benefit of the proven potential of ColorSync to color manage your media for the best playback experience and for sharing to your iPhone, iPod, or Apple TV. Take fun photo snapshots and video clips with your fitted iSight camera using Photo Booth. Photo Booth
Take fun photo snapshots and video clips with your fitted iSight camera using Photo Booth. Send them to your friends, use one as an iChat icon, add them to your Address Book, or manage and edit them in iPhoto. Your personal photographer.
Photo Booth is a fun application that makes it simple to take photos using the fitted iSight camera in your Mac. Just look into the lens, smile, and click. Before it snaps your photo, Photo Booth flashes your display with bright white to add more light to your face. Take a single snapshot or use the burst mode to take four fast pictures. The fun begins.
Sure, you may be able to take regular photos, but the real fun starts when you use the cool effects and backdrops in Photo Booth. Snap a photo of yourself at the Eiffel Tower or in outer space. Turn and twirl your smile with the weird Twirl effect. Add an artistic look with the Colored Pencil effect. Experiment with all the effects to transform your look. Capture video clips.
Photo Booth isn’t just for pictures. Using your iSight camera, you may be able to shoot video clips and send them to friends and family via email with just some clicks. Backdrops and effects work for your videos, too. Snow Leopard makes Time Machine up to 50 faster and decreases the time it takes to finish your initial backup to Time Capsule. Time Machine
Never again worry about losing your digital files. Time Machine automatically saves up to date copies of everything on your Mac photos, music, videos, papers, applications, and settings. If you ever have the need, you may be able to easily go back in time to recover anything. Set it, then forget it.
Time Machine works with your Mac and an external hard drive. Just connect the drive and assign it to Time Machine and you are a step closer to enjoying peace of mind. Time Machine will automatically back up your complete Mac, as well as system files, applications, accounts, preferences, music, photos, movies, and papers. But what makes Time Machine different from other backup applications is that it not only keeps a spare copy of every file, it remembers how your system looked on a given day so you may be able to revisit your Mac as it appeared in the past. Every change, every hour.
Following the initial backup of your complete Mac, Time Machine automatically makes incremental backups every hour, every day, copying just the files that changed since your last backup. And it does this all in the background so you may be able to continue working while Time Machine is busy copying your files. Time Machine saves the hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and weekly backups for everything older than a month. Go back in time.
Say you accidentally deleted a file you meant to save. Simply enter the Time Machine browser and you will see exactly how your computer looked on the dates you are browsing. You may be able to browse for files using Cover Flow or perform a Spotlight search to find what you need. Use the timeline to choose a particular date, or let Time Machine fly through time to find your last changes. Before recovering a file, use fast Look to verify the contents of the file, then click Restore to bring it back to the present. Ready when you’re.
When your mobile Mac is connected to your backup drive, Time Machine works as you’d expect. When it is not connected, Time Machine also works as you’d expect. It keeps track of which files changed since the last backup and backs them up to your backup drive the next time you connect. On any Mac, if Time Machine is unable to do a backup, that is duly noted in its preference pane. Migration with style.
If you are setting up a new Mac with files from an old Mac, Time Machine may help change the procedure. Just use Migration helper to copy portions of any Time Machine backup to a new Mac, or choose “Restore System from Time Machine” in the Leopard DVD Utilities menu. Decide any date recorded in Time Machine to set up your new Mac exactly as your last Mac was on that date. A native variant of Microsoft Office is available for Mac OS X, and it features a Mac friendly interface that allows you to create papers with Word, presentations with PowerPoint, and spreadsheets with Excel just like on a Windows PC. Almost any device that connects to a computer via USB, audio cable, or Bluetooth will work with a Mac. Built for compatibility.
Mom generally said, “Play nice with others.” Your computer should, too. With Mac OS X, you may be able to use Microsoft Office, connect to industry standard printers and cameras, and run Windows. Office on your Mac.
A native variant of Microsoft Office is available for Mac OS X, and it features a Mac friendly interface that allows you to create papers with Word, presentations with PowerPoint, and spreadsheets with Excel just like on a Windows PC. And it is matched with Microsoft Office for Windows, so you may be able to easily share papers with friends and colleagues. If you do not have Office installed on your Mac, you may be able to use fast Look to take a peek at Office papers without having to open an application. Microsoft Exchange Server support.
With Snow Leopard, the Mac is the only computer with fitted support for the new variant of Microsoft Exchange Server. So you may be able to use your Mac with all the features and applications you love at home and at work and have all your messages, meetings, and contacts in one place. Industry standard bearer.
Thanks to its support for business standards, Mac OS X works with virtually all email providers and websites. It also allows you to view the common file types, as well as Office papers, PDFs, pictures, text files, MP3s, videos, ZIP files, and more. If you are moving files from a PC or if your friends and colleagues send you files, you may be able to rest guaranteed they will work on your Mac. And if you purchase your Mac at an Apple Retail Store, an Apple Genius can move your files from your PC for you and recycle your old PC. Relax. Your camera, printer, and mouse work, too.
Nearly any device that connects to a computer via USB, audio cable, or Bluetooth will work with a Mac. That will include digital cameras, external hard drives, printers, keyboards, speakers, and more. You may be able to use a right click mouse with a Mac. And with thousands of device drivers included with Mac OS X, you may be able to start using these devices once you plug them in no have to download extra software. It runs Windows, too.
Have a Windows application you have to use once in a while? No problem. Every new Mac allows you to install Windows XP and Vista and run them at native speeds, using a fitted utility called Boot Camp. Setup is simple and safe for your Mac files. After you have finished the installation, you may be able to boot up your Mac using either Mac OS X or Windows. That’s why it is called Boot Camp. Or if you want to run Windows and Mac applications at the same time without rebooting you can install Windows using VMware or Parallels software. Connect to PCs over a network.
The Finder not only allows you to browse files on your Mac, it also makes it simple to find files on other computers both Mac and PC on your home network. Computers that let file sharing automatically show up in the Shared section of the Finder sidebar, allowing you to browse files and folders you have permission to view. With virtually no effort on your part, Mac OS X protects itself and you from viruses, malicious applications, and other threats. Mac OS X has you covered.
Mac OS X does not get PC viruses. And its fitted defenses help keep you safe from other malware without the annoyance of constant alerts and sweeps. Defense against viruses and malware.
With virtually no effort on your part, Mac OS X offers a multilayered system of defenses against viruses and other malicious applications, or malware. As an example, it prevents hackers from harming your programs through a technique called “sandboxing” restricting what actions programs can perform on your Mac, what files they can access, and what other programs they can launch. Other auto security features are Library Randomization, which prevents malicious commands from finding their targets, and Execute Disable, which guards the memory in your Mac from attacks. The 64 bit applications in Snow Leopard are more secure from hackers and malware than the 32 bit variants. That is because 64 bit applications can use more advanced security methods to fend off malicious code. Always on the alert.
Innocent looking files downloaded over the Internet may contain dangerous malware in disguise. That is why files you download using Safari, Mail, and iChat are screened to find out if they contain applications. If they do, Mac OS X alerts you, then warns you the 1st time you open one. You choose if to open the application or cancel the try. And Mac OS X can use digital signatures to verify that an application has not been changed since it was produced. Stay up to date. Automatically.
When a possible security threat arises, Apple responds quickly by software updates and security improvements that may be downloaded automatically and installed with a click. Apple works with the incident answer community, as well as the Forum of Incident answer and Security Teams FIRST and the FreeBSD Security Team, to proactively recognize and quickly correct operating system vulnerabilities. Also, Apple cooperates closely with organizations like the Computer Emergency answer Team Coordination Center CERT/CC. Features like Password helper assist you lock out identity thieves who are after personal data. Antiphishing technology in Safari protects you from scams by detecting fake websites. Easy to customize.
With Mac OS X, it is easy to customize and use security features. Setting up secure file sharing, as an example, involves a fast trip to System Preferences. FileVault allows you to encrypt all the files in your Home folder with just some clicks and a password of your picking. The firewall comes preconfigured to block online intruders, but it is easy to make whatever changes you want. Exercise parental control.
As a parent, you want your kids to have a safe and happy experience on the computer. Mac OS X keeps Parental Control an eye out when you can not. With a simple setup in Parental Controls preferences, you may be able to manage, monitor, and control the time your kids use up on the Mac, the sites they visit, and the people they chat with. Don’t go phishing.
Phishing is a form of fraud in which online thieves attempt to get sensitive info like user names, passwords, and credit card details by creating fake websites that appear like rightful businesses. The antiphishing technology in Safari protects you from such scams by detecting these fake websites. If you visit a suspicious site, Safari disables the page and displays an alert warning you about its suspect nature. Surf carefully.
Mac OS X makes it simple to stay safe online, if you are checking your bank account, sending private email, or sharing files with friends and coworkers. Features like Password helper assist you lock out identity thieves who are after personal data, while fitted encryption technologies protect your private info and communications. Security without the annoyance.
Mac OS X will not slow you down with constant Password helper security alerts and sweeps. Every Mac comes with a secure configuration so you do not have to worry about understanding complex settings. Just turn your Mac on and start working. When you have to be aware of something, it’ll let you know. And if you want to change the security configuration, just open System Preferences and make any modifications. More Power to Your Mac.
Since 2001, the breakthrough technologies and rock solid UNIX foundation of Mac OS X have made it not only the world’s most advanced operating system but also very secure, matched, and easy to use. Snow Leopard continues this novelty by incorporating new technologies that offer direct enhancements while also smartly setting it up for the future. 64 bit
64 bit computing used to be the province of scientists and engineers, but now this generational shift in computing gives all users the tools to apply the power of 64 bit to speed up everything from everyday applications to the most calling for scientific computations. Though Mac OS X is already 64 bit able in many ways, Snow Leopard takes the next big step by rewriting almost all system applications in 64 bit code and by enabling the Mac to deal with big amounts of memory. Now Mac OS X is faster, more secure, and totally prepared for the future. Grand Central Dispatch
More cores, not faster clock speeds, drive performance increases in today’s processors. Great Central Dispatch takes full advantage by making all of Mac OS X multicore aware and optimizing it for allocating tasks across many cores and processors. Great Central Dispatch also makes it much easier for developers to create programs that squeeze every last drop of power from multicore systems. OpenCL
With graphics processors surpassing speeds of a trillion functionings per second, they are able of considerably more than just drawing pictures. OpenCL in Snow Leopard is a technology that makes it possible for developers to tap the vast computing power now in the graphics processor and use it for any application. QuickTime X
Snow Leopard introduces QuickTime X, a big leap forward that advances modern media and Internet standards. QuickTime X will include a brand new player application, offers optimized support for modern codecs, and delivers more economical media playback, making it ideal for any application that needs to play media content.
Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard Reviews:
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160 of 174 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of five stars
Great, but not essential.,
August 28, 2009
By ,G. Argov See all my reviews
REAL NAME
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Is Apple’s new operating system, Snow Leopard, a strong, dependable OS that shows the versatility of Macs? Yes
That being said, is Snow Leopard an essential upgrade? No, not exactly.
THE DIFFERENCE isn’t THAT DRASTIC
The differences between Apple’s “Tiger” OS 10.4 and “Leopard” 10.5 were obvious, and there were many enhancements that made the upgrade useful. Like Time Machine, Boot Camp, fast Look, and many more The bulk of changes between Leopard 10.5 and this new release, “Snow Leopard” 10.6, are “under the hood” so to speak, so the average user may not notice as most of a change as they’d expect with an OS upgrade. But then again, why fix a bone that is not broken? Leopard was a success, and Snow Leopard improves on it, without drastically changing the user experience. The most of enhancements influence system dependability, speed, and resourcefulness. There’s also Microsoft Exchange support, which is great for those who need it.
EXPECTATIONS
I bought the Snow Leopard upgrade knowing full well it was not going to be a significantly different OS, so I was by no means disappointed. I have been following the tech news about Mac and Windows operating system upgrades closely, and am well aware that August’s release of Apple’s Snow Leopard and October’s release of Microsoft’s
Windows seven are meant to offer extra stability and implement greater resourcefulness, rather than totally overhaul the user experience. This is not a bad thing, since greater system dependability is more vital than adding bells and whistles that finally take away from the user experience i.E. Vista.
EXPERIENCE
I have only installed it on only one computer so far running on an Intel chip and 4GB of RAM, but installation was a breeze, and Snow Leopard was running smoothly so far. I earlier strongly disliked Preview’ and Quicktime’ since they were so slow I favored freeware Xee’ and VLC Media Player’. With Snow Leopard, loading times have observably improved for both Preview and Quicktime. I have not still noticed other enhancements in speed, but that may be because my computer was already fast to start with 4GB is great!.
Additionally, while I personally upgraded from Leopard to Snow Leopard, it’s nice to know that if you were not using OS 10.5 Leopard and were still on OS 10.4 Tiger, you may be able to upgrade straight to OS 10.6 Snow Leopard.
LAST THOUGHTS
I did not have issues with Leopard, so I do not think Snow Leopard was to me as essential an upgrade as Windows seven will be to Windows Vista. That being said, Snow Leopard is a strong and dependable OS, so I do not regret my buy. The low price makes this an cheap upgrade solution, but caused by the lack of drastic changes between Snow Leopard and its predecessor, one that is not totally needed.
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168 of 197 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of five stars
A bargain for the price and an OS for the future,
August 28, 2009
By ,Nathan Beauchamp “Dakotad555″ Oak Park, IL USA See all my reviews
TOP 100 REVIEWER
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The most extraordinary thing about Snow Leopard is simply that it may be installed on a Mac running Tiger. You don’t have to pay the money to purchase the boxed set to upgrade if you never upgraded to Leopard. That means that you may upgrade a Tiger computer to Leopard using this disk. It’s up to the user to find out if they have an ethical problem with that, Apple surely knew that this was possible when they released the software: they understand and use DRM effectively and generally have. The fact it’s missing here tells me that they’re mainly worried with to get Snow Leopard unto as many computers as possible as fast as possible. I’m sure part of that’s the want to have Snow Leopard outperform Windows seven which debuts in October.
So what do you get with Snow Leopard? The answer is mainly performance boosts, though many of those aren’t really related yet since not many virtually none 3rd party applications use the performance gains offered by Snow Leopard. Alike to Windows 7s capability to load share between CPU and GPU, many of the changes in Snow Leopard will take some number of years for developers to really start to use and write programs for.
Relying on 64 bit architecture through the complete OS, Snow Leopard is generally an upgrade for the future: as developers write programs that take benefit of the new, higher roof, end users like you and I’ll benefit. For now, most of the performance increases are only related to Apple’s own software. But, that is not to say these are not nice or useful, and in many cases impressive:
1 Opening big photos is faster in preview mode
2 Quicktime uses considerably less CPU on all Macs despite of generation. Older Macs benefit the most with as much as 40 performance gains.
3 Time Machine backups take about 20 less time
4 Snow Leopard itself installs faster than Leopard
5 Boot times are faster with Snow Leopard by 5 10, Shut down times are somewhat faster also.
6 File compression is faster by 10 15
These are somewhat simplified. If you want the exact numbers you may be able to find them online: Google “Snow Leopard Performance”
Of all of these, the performance increases afforded to older 1st generation Macbooks are the most important. Breathing new life into older hardware is not easy, particularly not important enhancements. Snow Leopard manages to do just that and make slower 1.6ghz MacBooks that more useful.
Installation itself is a SNAP did I talk about it takes less time than Leopard?. I have already upgraded a MacBook and MacBook Pro, and installation was simple, fast, and easy. I plan to install Snow Leopard on another older Macbook afterward in the week and will upgrade this review once I have.
The not many new visual tweaks are nice, but not the reason to upgrade. Better stacks is useful, as is the quickness of Finder, but in general I do not find myself blown away by the upgrade. This is not an completely new OS with a great array of enhancements, on the side from the welcome and useful performance increases. That said, if you’re a power user or just observant, you’ll NOTICE the speed increase, particularly in Finder. I used to favor Google Desktop search on PCs to Finder, but this upgrade swayed me to favor Finder.
UPDATE September 2nd 2009
A not many other changes of minor importance but on occasion great usefulness:
1 Air Port now shows all available wireless networks and their relative signal strength, something Windows has done going back to XP, but that for many weird reason was absent from OSX 10.X till now. Now when you turn on the Air Port you get a drop down to choose which wireless signal you want also as signal strength.
2 The date was added to the desktop. This is not that amazing but it’s useful.
3 I’m LOVING the way stacks work now. They are so more intuitive to use and navigate, particularly the capability to brows through directories directly from the stack itself.
4 Trash has the capability to restore a file to it is original place right from the trash. This is a feature common to Windows that was strangely absent from Mac OS. It is nice to see them catch this omission and correct it, but odd it took this long to do it.
A big complaint:
1 Seriously, no support for CS3? Why Apple, why? I do not have the great to drop on the newest variant of CS. This is , frustrating, and makes me wish I could take back a star and downgrade this to a 4 star review. CS3 is still so widely used that I am amazed Apple decided not to offer support for it. If you want to continue to get support for CS3 or do not have the money to upgrade to CS4, this may be a big deal and a reason not to upgrade.
A Minor complaint:
1 One of my time machine back ups for a co workers Mac was apparently corrupted by the upgrade. Luckily they did not have any old data they needed from that backup so I just made a new one with Snow Leopard that mounts just good, but this is something to be aware of. If you have a important time machine backup that you can not pay for to lose, I’d propose making a backup of the complete drive clone it using SuperDuper! or something like it.
End of update
Snow Leopard will grow in usefulness as time passes. As I said earlier, once 3rd party applications start to be written to take benefit of advancements in the OS, the performance overhead will become more and more useful. Expect to wait 6 12 months for that to happen, but in the mean time at least you are enjoying speedier OS performance for an inexpensive price!
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75 of 86 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of five stars
Nice New Features, But Far From Perfect.,
August 30, 2009
By ,Bagpipe Player See all my reviews
I upgraded my Leopard equipped late 2006 Black MacBook to Snow Leopard. I had it on pre order all week and delivered on release date. It does not boast a whole lot of new stuff to it, but I like the new features it does have, and I love the fact that it takes up so less hard drive space on my MacBook I gained an amazing 29 gigabytes of space. I also noticed a pretty good speed increase after upgrading.
I really love the new Dock Expose, and how I can look at just one specific application in Expose instead of all the open windows in any given space. It makes finding things many easier. I also like the fact that you may now resize your icons in the finder. Dock scrolling with magnification and cover flow have been smoothed out largely which makes it that more nice. Quicktime X is a pretty good movie recorder and the interface looks many better than last variant of Quicktime. Many other refinements are pretty nice also.
64 bit support is amazing and I can see a difference in the apps that are now running in 64 bit see the Activity Monitor for the apps that are running in 64 bit. Things just run smoother and faster.
Now, as far as many drawbacks of the system, this 1st one is a big one: when redesigning Safari, they made Safari and its plugins and totally separate processes, supposedly to enhance the stability of Safari. Possibly it did this, but consequently, it eats up far more CPU power than the last iteration. This can result in your system slowing down, and I am running into serious issues with heating when using Flash as an example, it eats up nearly 70 of the CPU and I am running around 150F, which is somewhat dangerous. As well, there was many lost rearward compatibility with Snow Leopard, and for me, most notable with VMWare Fusion. I hope this is addressed soon.
So could I think about this a needed upgrade? Not really. If an upgrade is regarded as, it should be more for the speed increase than for new features, as most users will not take benefit of many if any of the improvements in the interface itself. But, the speed increase and freeing up of hard drive space are nice. As well, if you have programs that may have compatibility issues I’d most likely recommend holding off and waiting for these to be resolved before upgrading. If you do not have these issues, go ahead and upgrade, but, I believe you may want to do so with caution, and keep a copy of your Leopard install disk useful in case you have to revert should you run into any of the issues mentioned.
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Other names for Mac OS X:
e 330-, e32-, lexamrk, 2e32-, 330-, 232-, lemark, e330, e232-,
May 1, 2009 at 4:54 pm
Amazon or Ebay generaly have a low price than an outlet
May 2, 2009 at 4:15 pm
Saw it discounted somewhere, great deal but forgot where
May 3, 2009 at 9:32 pm
Don’t think closeout prices are a deal, i would buy it now.
May 4, 2009 at 9:29 pm
What is the best price that i can find in Memphis. Any coupons?
May 5, 2009 at 9:54 pm
I have one for sale, great price, email me if interested
May 6, 2009 at 0:31 pm
I did try Amazon, no deals worth mentioning
May 7, 2009 at 1:57 pm
saw mac os x reviewed everywhere, and this really is the cheapest price
May 8, 2009 at 0:57 pm
What is the warranty like?
May 9, 2009 at 4:28 pm
I think Amazon may have free shipping
May 10, 2009 at 4:45 pm
So far the best offer for mac os can usually be found at an online dealer
May 11, 2009 at 5:55 pm
Is that the lowest price for mac os x online, or all deals included?
May 12, 2009 at 9:33 pm
Compare mac os prices here or on ebay, is my best guess
May 13, 2009 at 0:26 pm
saw lexmark e232 reviewed everywhere, and this really is the cheapest price
May 14, 2009 at 2:58 pm
price of mac os is a great deal for software
May 15, 2009 at 10:27 pm
Well wholesale may have it cheaper than Staples or Costco
May 16, 2009 at 2:57 pm
I did try Target, no deals worth mentioning