Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard

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The grace of Leopard's interface enhancements makes productivity more pleasurable with a Mac, as more than 300 functional and fun features top off this update.… Read full review

Typical price: £85
Editors' rating:
  • 8 out of 10
8 out of 10

Pros

  • Elegant backup via Time Machine
  • Finder offers powerful navigation tweaks
  • Novel workspace customisation through Spaces' virtual desktops
  • Integration with web data and applications
  • Cover Flow visualises file browsing
  • iChat Theater offers green-screen backgrounds and lets users access each others' desktops
  • Boot Camp included

Cons

  • Some new features, such as geotagging, aren't obvious to find
  • Users with older Macs can't run Leopard

Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard is Apple's first major operating system upgrade since Tiger more than two years ago. The changes include close to 315 new features which, while not earth-shattering, further streamline the experience of using a Mac. Please check back soon for performance test results of Leopard.

Should you pay for Leopard? If you're happy with the way Tiger works, then maybe not. If you need Boot Camp, however, then you must have Leopard. And if you're considering the purchase of a new computer, Leopard makes Macs more enticing than Tiger did. Plus, Leopard makes it far easier to find documents and applications than Windows Vista. Leopard's interface niceties made the daily mechanics of using the computer more pleasurable. Mundane chores, such as finding files and backing up data, become a visual treat (see our Mac OS X Leopard screenshot gallery).

Mac OS X10.5 Leopard costs £85 (inc. VAT) out of the box, or £129 for up to five users. Anyone who buys a Mac between October 1 2007 and December 29 2007 that doesn't include Mac OS X Leopard can get Leopard for £5.95.

Setup and installation
It took us about 40 minutes to install Mac OS X10.5 Leopard on an Intel-based MacBook. That's a bit longer than it took to install Windows Vista, but not by much. You should proceed carefully to migrate the files and applications you'll need. Apple steps you through the process, but take your time to avoid overwriting valuable data.

To run Leopard, you'll need an Intel or PowerPC G5 Mac. A PowerPC-based G4 Mac with an 867MHz or better processor will work as well. Apple suggests having 512MB of RAM. Additionally, you'll need a USB or Firewire external backup drive (or a file-sharing volume on a network) to use Time Machine. Features on iChat require a webcam.

Features
The new look and feel of Leopard is different without demanding that you relearn the layout. The Dock organising applications and file becomes a bit more transparent. Bump it over to one side, and the Dock looks a bit flatter. A drop shadow now highlights the active window, and all windows share a unified visual design.

Click on an icon on the Dock and related items fan out in the order you last accessed them. New stacks help to unclutter your desktop by showing icons of items in the order they were last accessed. If the stack is packed with items, you can display them as a grid.

The souped-up Finder introduces a sidebar that allows you to rearrange items in the Places section, while Search For submenus can locate files based on type and when you last worked on them. Click on Today, for instance, and you'll see everything you've touched lately in chronological order. If you work on a network, checking out another person's desktop starts with the simple Share Screen option.

Spotlight scours through files in shared folders on a network, as well as within Safari's Web History. It gets smarter, reading 'Not' and 'Or', dates and phrases, and even serving as a calculator for trig equations.

Many new design elements reflect what you've already seen in iTunes and iPhone. Cover Flow, for instance, shuffles through folders as you hold down an arrow key. This makes perfect sense for browsing files. Plus, you can peek at most documents instantly. Quick Look provides previews that can pop up files from iWork, iLife, Microsoft Office and PDFs, as well as popular image and video formats. In each instance, relevant options appear, such as Full Screen view or Add to iPhoto'. Select several files, double click them, and you've got a custom slide show.

In addition to making it easier to find your work, interface additions are intended to make multitasking less stressful. Virtual desktops, called Spaces, cluster open windows into categories or boxes. This can cut the number of windows you may otherwise stack around your desktop — especially on tiny monitors. For example, you could move everything you need to edit a holiday video into one space, and in another Space place the files and apps needed to write a dissertation. Spaces were simple to set up (such as drawing a chart in a word processor), but slightly awkward for us to master until we learned the keyboard shortcuts. You can also use the mouse to drag items between Spaces, and to drag the Spaces themselves around.

If you rarely back up your work because the process is too boring or confusing, Time Machine is likely to change that. The spaced-out interface is about as sexy as backup can get, displaying a dynamic timeline alongside snapshots of selected folders and files throughout their history. To restore a file you lost, just go to an earlier time, click the Restore button, and you'll zoom back to your present Desktop. For a current period of 24 hours, Time Machine backs up automatically every hour. It backs up each day for the past month and each week for content updated earlier than that. Time Machine immediately detected our external hard drive via two USB ports and we started backing up within a few minutes. You can check out the drives of fellow Leopard users with Time Machine, too.

iChat lets you and Leopard-using buddies share files and control each others' desktops, expanding the tool's potential professional use. Now you can record iChat sessions as AAC audio or MPEG video files ready for an iPod — great for podcasters.

iChat Theater's silly effects let you distort your face, fun-house mirror style. Green-screen backgrounds within iChat Theater let your talking head appear in a video conference in front of, say, included images of the moon or your own pictures. Other chat buddies can see these, whether they're using an older iteration of OS X, or even if they're using AIM on a Windows PC. iChat enables you to share files as you gab via video, so you and a friend can watch the same movie clip or flip through the same PowerPoint presentation. Photo Booth integrates with iChat, letting you record videos and show off full-screen slide shows.

Mac OS's new Mail application integrates rich note-taking into email. These notes can serve as scrapbooks containing images. Some 32 email templates enable you to drop in pictures and resize them with a built-in photo browser. Mail's RSS feeds tie in to those in Safari. The email application also detects addresses for mapping via Google, as well as contacts for a quick save. Natural language capabilities, similar to those within Google Mail, recognise phrases such as 'next Saturday' for scheduling. Changes are synchronised between Mail and iCal. Setting up Mail is less complicated than Outlook, and it works with accounts from 27 services, including Yahoo, AOL and Google Mail.

Finally, the Safari browser bakes in tabbed browsing without making you turn on the feature. Safari's new Web Clips tool is cool, letting you turn any snippet from a Web page into a widget for your Dashboard.

Leopard offers many tie-ins to web-based content. Among them is Wikipedia as a new companion to the Dictionary. Although you can access the open-source encyclopedia from the Desktop, no entries are saved locally.

Geotagging is a cool addition to Leopard, enabling you to tie photos to latitude and longitude through built-in GPS on digital cameras, so you can put picture galleries on a map.

There are updates to less glamorous elements such as Automator and Dashcode, and Network Preferences is streamlined. There's support for connecting more cameras via cable or Wi-Fi, and for other gadgets via Bluetooth. ColorSync reads EXIF sRGB data from cameras, too.

Security
More firewall controls are among several security enhancements to Leopard. To fend off Trojans and spoofing attempts, you'll be grilled more when downloading materials. A mechanism called Sandboxing is supposed to prevent potential external threats from hijacking your applications. Parental controls are now featured more prominently in the System, offering content filters, time limits and Internet activity loggers to keep tabs on young web surfers.

Service and support
Support options remain the same as in the Tiger OS. You get 90 days of help free by telephone, as with other products from Apple. Phone support thereafter costs £35 per incident. AppleCare support lasts a year after you buy Leopard. For extra peace of mind, you should consider extended warranties.

Apple has also tweaked the Help menus within OS X 10.5. These are arranged well, although they didn't always provide an instant answer. Many items are better explained on Apple's web site via message boards, user forums and a well-organised knowledge base.

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