BBC: Apple’s new Mac OS X Leopard’s Time Machine and Quick Look alone worth upgrading
Monday, October 29, 2007 - 08:58 AM EST "Apple unleased the latest incarnation of its Mac OS X operating system, called Leopard, on Friday, boasting 300 new features," Darren Waters reports for BBC News. "But is it worth trading in your Tiger for a new big cat?""A new operating system is often more about anticipation than delivery. There are so many new features that a typical user will never think about, let alone use," Waters reports. "The key question is: Will it change the way I use my computer for the better?"
"Leopard is a solid release which will please most Mac users without radically altering how they use their machine. For die-hard Mac fans it also does enough to distinguish itself from Microsoft's Vista," Waters reports.
MacDailyNews Take: As in, "it's not a chrome -plated turd for which you waited 5+ years."
Waters reports, "The introduction of Time Machine and Quick Look alone does enough to warrant the purchase."
Full article, in which Waters states (like a true MDN'er, "many applications seem snappier," here.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader "Marcus" for the heads up.]

Well, aside from they typical font issues that arrive and a horrendous experience launch MS Word (I have to have it for clients), where it told me about 50 percent of my fonts were "corrupt", I am quite happy with Leopard and astounded by the quick look feature, especially when using spotliight.