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Apple’s CEO Steve Jobs previews Mac OS X 10.4 ‘Tiger’ to ship in the first half of 2005
Monday, June 28, 2004 - 06:24 PM EST

Apple today previewed Mac OS X version 10.4 "Tiger," the fifth major version of Mac OS X that will ship in the first half of 2005, extending Apple’s leadership in software innovation. Tiger continues Apple’s blazing pace of innovation with more than 150 breakthrough new features including Spotlight, a revolutionary way to instantly find any file, document or information created by any application on the Mac; Safari RSS, a new version of Apple’s acclaimed web browser that incorporates instant access to RSS (Really Simple Syndication) data feeds on the web; Dashboard, a dazzling new way to instantly access a new collection of accessory "Widgets;" and a new version of Apple’s iChat instant messaging client with the industry’s first multi-person audio and video conferencing in a stunning 3D interface.

"With OS X Apple has become, once again, the industry innovator in operating systems and Tiger will further widen the gap," said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO in the press release. "Others are now following OS X’s taillights, and Tiger will make it even harder for them to ever catch up."

Spotlight is Apple’s new lightning fast way to find any file, document or information created by any application on the Mac. Much like users can instantly find songs in iTunes by their name, artist or album, Spotlight enables users to instantly find just about anything—including emails, presentations, images, appointments and Microsoft Office documents—then automatically organizes and displays the results by kind, time or people. Spotlight technology also powers Smart Folders in the Finder, Smart Mailboxes in Mail and Smart Groups in Address Book that work like Smart Playlists in iTunes to automatically keep a user's information organized and updated.

Safari RSS, a new version of Apple’s acclaimed web browser uses the emerging RSS Internet standard to provide instant access to the most current information from leading sites such as The New York Times, BusinessWeek and the BBC. Safari RSS automatically discovers an RSS enabled site and displays a special icon, which when pressed instantly transforms Safari into a full featured RSS reader displaying the discovered RSS feed. With Safari RSS, users can easily create their own personal news clipping service with up to the minute information from several RSS feeds merged into one easy-to-read interface.

Dashboard offers users instant access to a new class of accessory applications called "Widgets." Built on Apple’s Expose technology introduced in Panther, Dashboard provides fingertip access to everyday tools and information such as stock quotes, webcams, calendars and calculators. Tiger includes several Widgets and provides a rich developer environment for developers to extend Dashboard with third party Widgets.

iChat in Tiger supports the new industry standard H.264 video codec for dramatically better picture quality with no increase in bandwidth. In addition, the new iChat adds multi-way audio and video conferencing, so that users can audio conference with up to 10 people and video conference with up to three other people using a stunning new 3D interface.

Additional new features in Tiger include:
- Core Image and Core Video provide the foundation for new image and video processing applications, building on the success of Core Audio which is leading the next generation of innovative audio application development
- QuickTime support for the next-generation MPEG-4 video codec H.264 delivers incredible scalability across the entire bandwidth spectrum, from 3G mobile media to High Definition broadcast and beyond
- Tiger can natively run 64-bit processes for database, engineering and scientific applications to take advantage of the increased performance unleashed when accessing massive amounts of memory while still running side-by-side with existing 32-bit applications
- .Mac Sync using a completely new Sync engine in Tiger ensures that .Mac subscribers can synchronize their contacts, bookmarks, email preferences and calendar across multiple machines
- Automator, an innovative easy-to-use application that automates simple, complex, or repetitive tasks without requiring the user to write scripts
- major advances to the open standards UNIX-based foundation including an updated state-of-the-art kernel with improved SMP scalability, 64-bit virtual memory, modernized network services and Xgrid, Apple's easy-to-use distributed computing software
- improved Windows compatibility that uses powerful open standards-based networking technologies to make it even easier for Mac OS X users to access a Windows-based home directory and authenticate against Microsoft’s Active Directory
- Xcode 2, the latest version of Apple’s powerful suite of developer tools, designed to make it even easier and faster to build innovative Mac OS X applications.

Mac OS X version 10.4 'Tiger' will be available in the first half of 2005 through the Apple Store, at Apple’s retail stores and through Apple Authorized Resellers for a suggested retail price of $129 (US). Users with a .Mac membership can take full advantage of all the innovative new features in Tiger to synchronize their information between multiple Macs. More information on Tiger can be found here.

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Jun 28, 04 - 06:34 pm Comment from: Rick

How might the 64bit capabilities affect iMovie, iDVD, etc...?

Jun 28, 04 - 06:47 pm Comment from: Paul


Probably not much. The real benefit of 64-bitness will be for heavy-duty apps. However, hopefully Apple will continue the process of optimizing and speeding up the OS in general, but consumers using apps like iMovie and iDVD are far, far away from requiring 64-bitness.

This is great news for scientific number crunchers, though, as is Final Cut Pro, Motion, and Photoshop users, I'm sure. There's plenty of video producers who would love to be able to run their entire FCP in 32+ Gigabytes of RAM, I'm sure.

Jun 28, 04 - 07:09 pm Comment from: jeff

I'm intrigued by the sync between macs over the internet. I couldn't figure out, however, if all the data had to use the .Mac server as an intermediary or if the sync process could go straight between the macs.


anyone?

Jun 28, 04 - 07:45 pm Comment from: Sputnik

These are not reasons to upgrade. Wait for Longhorn in a few years. They will have all these features plus any new ones that Apple adds. You will only have to pay for one copy of Longhorn if you wait rather than several upgrades from Apple. It just makes monetary sense.

Jun 28, 04 - 08:06 pm Comment from: Jack A

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrreat!!!

Jun 28, 04 - 08:25 pm Comment from: cpr86

NEXT YEAR??????? What the heck. Why annouce it now? Sounds like a windows move. What a waste of time.

Jun 28, 04 - 09:10 pm Comment from: meat of moose

If ya didn't see i before, see it now, Mac-heads.

http://marketwatch-cnet.com.com/1606-2_3-5250702.html?tag=ne.vid

Jun 28, 04 - 11:34 pm Comment from: Joe McConnel

So, everyone is pleased with the wwdc surprises?

Jun 29, 04 - 01:09 am Comment from: Romeodawg

Yes, we should just wait a few years until another ugly, bloated, buggy version of Windows comes along with less features than OSX... Sputnik is a riot.

Jun 29, 04 - 02:50 am Comment from: M

Following the keynote via text feed, I thought Tiger sucks. But finally seeing the keynote from Apple's website I was like ;-] Apple should have done it live to avoid all the bad word of mouth.

Jun 29, 04 - 10:25 am Comment from: KennyLucius

I really have to wonder at the timing. Why announce it a full year ahead of time? Because they had nothing else to announce? The other versions were announced a few months ahead, and were shipped in the Fall. What's the holdup?

I think most of this version will be unseen -- 64-bitness that will not be seen or heard from by anyone, but which takes a lot of work to implement.

I think that the little security scare recently has slowed them down a bit. Jobs is probably demanding a re-think of a few innards.

Doesn't Apple ship new OS versions along with a new system? Maybe they don't have a new system coming until next year, so they see no reason to start shipping a new OS until then. It would be embarrassing to ship a new OS and have it adopted really slowly -- a new system guarantees a certain level of adoption.

Still -- those are just minor reasons in my opinion. What's the holdup?

Jun 29, 04 - 11:10 am Comment from: G Spank

I don't think it's bad to announce it this much ahead of time. It gives developers plenty of lead time...

Jun 29, 04 - 07:06 pm Comment from: cww

How about Apple's NEW multi-processing system? You can add as many processers as you want thru the pci slots!! A 17 processer powermac was demo'd. Apple will use Tao's operating system integration, which will alow you to expand even a g5 i-mac,to a 17 processer computer. Each computer will now come with BASIC to promote easy programing. Each pci-x board can hold up to 4 processers. Some devoloper's are already DONE MAKING THE BOARDS. Each board contains up to 4 processers, or you can install then yourself. Even if these are one Ghz g5's that's STILL 17 Ghz total combined power in the computer!!
Transputer!! (Anybody know the history of the transputer?)

Jun 29, 04 - 07:14 pm Comment from: jk

WOW! that's great! Just plug in the extra board's huh? It's nice to see BASIC included.

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