![]() Apple won't be releasing the software on a USB stick like it did last time, so downloading from the Mac App Store is your only option. If you don't, well, you may want to look into spending a morning at your nearest Starbucks. Upgrading to Mountain Lion couldn't be easier - assuming you have the kind of internet connection that can reasonably handle a 4.34GB download. So, how easily can Mac users justify that $20 download? Follow along after the break, as we put those 200 features to the test.%Gallery-161032%īy subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy. ![]() What seems to unite the vast majority of the 200 features, however, is a nod to iOS. Others, such as full-screen mode for Notes. Some are major, including things like a new Notification Center, AirPlay Mirroring and a desktop version of Messages. But Apple insists that this latest build is more than just a seasonal refresh - in all, it boasts more than 200 new features. In February, however, the old operating system showed she still had some life left in her, when the next edition was revealed, arriving over the summer and called Mountain Lion.īased on the name alone, you'd think 10.8 would be a modest improvement over its predecessor - not unlike the baby step between Leopard (10.5) and Snow Leopard (10.6). This time last year, the company issued OS 10.7 Lion, a king-of-the-jungle moniker many thought would mark the end of Apple's big cat naming scheme and, by extension, the OS X lineage. In nearly each of these intervening years, Apple has issued a major update to its desktop operating system, OS X. We've got a new president approaching the end of his first term, the US has embarked on two major wars and the words "Lady Gaga" have become much more than just gibberish. OS X Mountain Lion: arrives on Macs next month, priced at $20Ī lot has changed since early 2001.OS X Mountain Lion 10.8 in-depth preview.
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