We believe in the long term value of Apple hardware. You should be able to use your Apple gear as long as it helps you remain productive and meets your needs, upgrading only as necessary. We want to help maximize the life of your Apple gear.
Thanks to any number of people attending the Worldwide Developer
Conference in San Francisco yesterday and blogging from the keynote,
anyone with an Internet connection could know what was being presented
in almost real time.
One thought kept coming to my mind: Lisa lives!
Mac OS X 10.7 Lion
Lisa was Apple's first
computer with a graphical user interface (GUI), and it debuted a year
before the Mac. With a $10,000 price, it didn't set the world on fire,
but it paved the way for Macintosh and had some innovative features
that were left behind when the Mac, with far less RAM, no hard drive,
and just one built-in floppy drive, displaced it.
Lisa, introduced in 1983.
Perhaps the most missed feature was that you didn't have to save a
file or remember your place. As you worked, Lisa took care of saving, and when you quit
a file,quit an app, or turned off the computer, it marked your place,
so the next time you launched that document, there you were.
That's back with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, which will be available in July
for the remarkable price of $29. The feature is called Resume,
and it's only going to be available with apps designed to take
advantage of Lion.
Auto Save not only saves your documents as you work, as every
auto save feature in the world does, it also allows you to revert to a
previous version or open an earlier version, copy text or data, and
paste it into the current version. You don't have to remember to save
when you quit an app. Again, apps will have to be updated to take
advantage of it.
The third part of this is Versions, which is like Time
Machine for your document, making it easy to navigate however many
saved versions Auto Save has archived. This goes way beyond
anything Lisa had.
That's just three of 250 new features coming with Lion.
We used to complain about the $129 price of Mac OS X and the
fact that Apple offered no discount to those upgrading from the
previous version. The $199 five-user family pack helped for those with
two or more Macs, but the cost of OS X remained an obstacle to the
user base keeping current.
Kudos to Apple for keeping OS costs low since the release of OS X
10.6 Snow Leopard at $29 (or $49 for the five-user family pack) in
August 2009. It not only makes it easier for Mac users to afford an
up-to-date operating system (and with Lion, you'll be downloading it
via the Mac App Store, so no running out to the store or waiting for a
disc to come in the mail), but it gives Apple and Mac developers a much
broader base of users with the latest OS. (Among visitors to Low End
Mac, 69.6% are running Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard while less than
14% are running older versions of OS X on Intel-based Macs. In the
world of Windows, on the other hand, the majority is still using
Windows XP - far from current!)
iOS 5
While Macs have been around since 1984 and OS X since 2001, it's
only four years since the first iOS device arrived, the original
iPhone. Apple announced that 200 million iDevices have been sold, and
they account for 40% of the entire mobile device market.
When it arrives later this year, iOS 5 will deliver 200 new
features, but probably the most requested is the end of tethering. The
world's most popular post-PC devices will no longer have to be
connected to a computer for OS and updates. Updates will now be
available "over the air"!
Some other new features:
Newsstand, like iBooks for magazines and newspapers.
Integrated Twitter, and you'll be able to tweet from apps as well.
Address Book will also sync entries with Twitter IDs.
Reminders lets you create reminders that can be time-based - or
location-based, such as "Remind me to call Bob when I get home."
iOS will be available sometime this fall and supports the iPhone
3GS, 3G iPod touch, and all iPads.
iCloud
First of all, iCloud will be free, just like
Apple's original iTools (which became $99/year .mac and later $99/year
MobileMe). Although you can't sign up today, you can sign up to be
informed when it is available. 5 GB of free storage that
integrates with Macs and iDevices.
Wireless backup to iCloud from your iDevice on a daily basis. And
you'll be able to store and work with documents in the cloud. (Apple
will have an iCloud API for developers.) Documents will be available on
Macs, and Photo Stream will be accessible from Apple TV.
Lots of iCloud coolness, like buying a new iDevice and having it
automatically download all of your App Store and iTunes Store purchases
automatically. One less thing iOS users will need a computer for.
A Different Paradigm
I've been using personal computers since the Apple II+ era, and in
all that time, whatever computer, operating system, and program I used
asked me where to save my work.* Did I want to save to tape or 5.25"
floppy on the Apple II, Commodore VIC-20, or Commodore 64? If I had
more than one floppy drive, which one did I want to save to? In DOS and
on the Mac, which directory (or, later, subdirectory) did I want to
save to? When hard drives came along, did I want to save to it or to a
floppy drive? When I began to partition my hard drives, which partition
did I want to save to? And then came options like SyQuest drives,
networked servers, USB flash drives, and
Page not found | Low End Mac
Welcome Image and Text
We believe in the long term value of Apple hardware. You should be able to use your Apple gear as long as it helps you remain productive and meets your needs, upgrading only as necessary. We want to help maximize the life of your Apple gear.
Apple began to do away with that kind of thinking when it introduced
iTunes, which had its own defaults
for where to save files and what directory structure to use. It was
completely transparent to the end user, and programs like Mail and
iPhoto use the same paradigm. You don't have to have a clue where on
the hard drive or what kind of directory structure is being used.
On iOS devices, that's the norm, and it's one reason it can be
challenging to add external storage to them. They aren't designed so
the user has to use the folder/subfolder paradigm we've been using for
at least 30 years.
Frankly, this is going to be wonderful for non-geek users, whether
they always save their files to the same place or know how to use
folders. The won't have to think about that any longer, and it looks
like you'll even be able to sync files between Macs and iDevices using
iCloud (and perhaps some other OS X 10.7 and iOS 5 features
as well).
Apple's 20th Anniversary Mac from 1997.
Once again, Apple is changing the face of personal computing,
something it's been doing since the Apple I shipped in April
1976 - over 35 years ago.
A sampling of Apple innovations include the first color computer
(Apple II,
1977), the first affordable floppy controller (Disk II, 1979), the first
commercial GUI (Lisa, 1983), first use of the 3.5" floppy (Macintosh 128K, 1984),
first PC with built-in networking, first PC with SCSI (Mac Plus, 1986), first PC with a
built-in CD-ROM (Performa 600,
1992), first PC with a flat panel display (20th Anniversary Mac, 1997),
first computer to abandon legacy ports for USB (original iMac, 1998), first
notebook designed for WiFi (original iBook, 1999), and
the first PCs with Thunderbolt (the Early 2011 MacBook Pro family).
Apple's Macs, Mac OS, iPods, iPhones, iPad, and iOS have changed
entire industries - and Lion, iOS 5, and iCloud are going to move
it several steps further ahead of the competition.
* Okay, truth be told, I didn't have to specify
where. There were defaults, but if I didn't specify where, I might
never be able to find the file again, which led to programs that could
scan your drive for file names - and later tools like Spotlight that
would index the content of your files. Now if you create a document in
Pages for Lion, it will handle all of those details.
Dan Knight has been using Macs since 1986,
sold Macs for several years, supported them for many more years, and
has been publishing Low End Mac since April 1997. If you find Dan's articles helpful, please consider making a donation to his tip jar.
Links for the Day
Mac of the Day: Yikes! Power Mac G4, introduced 1999.08.31. The only Power Mac G4 with PCI graphics was built on a modified G3 motherboard.