Testseek.com have collected 46 expert reviews of the Apple Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Apple Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard.
January 2008
(85%)
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Published: 2007-11-02, Author: John , review by: techcrunch.com
Abstract: Here we sit, a week after the Leopard launch, exhausted. Like the machine at Ikea that opens and closes the drawers in the kitchen section over and over again to show how strong they are, I’ve pounded at Leopard with a vengeance, opening and closing...
Several killer features; low system requirements; cheaper than most versions of Windows Vista
Time Machine backup app is limited in functionality; iChat has limited support for instant-messaging applications
Mac owners that like working faster and smarter will like OS X 10.5 Leopard. Upgrading to Leopard isnt absolutely necessary, but we strongly recommend doing so....
Other reviewers have rightly sung Time Machines praises, and so will I. For all Leopards faults, Apples engineers deserve a pat on the back for this feature alone. Leopard is worth buying for Time Machine - all the other stuff are free extras, in m...
Abstract: Mac OS X Leopard finally shipped at 6pm BST on Friday 26 October and MacUser had its hands on a copy ten minutes later. We had two questions as we waited for it to install on our test Core Duo Mac mini: was it worth the wait, and is it worth the £85 as...
Abstract: OS X har kommit i flera varianter - Gepard, Puma, Jaguar, Panter, Tiger och nu senast version 10.5 - Leopard. Det hela börjar med installationen, och den är precis som vanligt väldigt enkel att genomföra. Men när vi på MacWorld installerade Leopard kr...
Time Machine makes backing up extremely easy, Cover Flow and Quick Look help users find files, Mail can create attractive stationery, as well as Notes and To-Dos, Improved parental controls, Works well on older Macs
Time Machine can’t back up to shared network storage, Stacks isn’t an improvement over old method of storing folders in the Dock, iCal still isn’t robust enough as a calendar
Abstract: Mac OS 10.5, aka Leopard, may be the most analyzed release of an operating system upgrade in Apple’s history, coming as it does into a flourishing blogosphere after a multi-month (and leaky) beta cycle and an extra six months of rumination, contempl...
Leopard Finders new sidebar is better organised and more usable than its Tiger counterpart; Boot Camp for Windows-to-Mac switchers; Quick Look; which lets users preview the contents of documents without opening the program; Spotlight is faster and now...
The areas of light and dark behind the menu bar can severely decrease the readability of menu items; in the Spaces feature sometimes windows would appear in spaces that we didnt expect The Final Word So are 300-plus new features worth $158? That answe...
So are 300-plus new features worth $158? That answer will vary, because no single user will ever take advantage of all -- or maybe even half -- of those 300 features. But given the impressive value of Time Machine and improvements to existing programs ...
Abstract: I previously wrote about the features I was anxiously awaiting in Leopard. I’m happy to say that the OS has met and exceeded my expectations.InstallThe package arrived at 10:30am on Friday. Unfortunately, I was on the road for business and coul...
Abstract: IntroductionBackgroundLeopards new lookLeopards new look (continued)The Kernel64-bitFSEventsCore AnimationQuartz GLCore UIInternals grab bagThe FinderThe DockTime MachinePerformanceGrab bagWelcome to tomorrow Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard: the Ars Technica ...