Snow Leopard may ship early
It is beginning to look like the wait is nearly over. There are indications that Apple will begin delivery of OS X 10.6, popularly known as Snow Leopard, ahead of schedule and maybe within two weeks.
It is beginning to look like the wait is nearly over. There are indications that Apple will begin delivery of OS X 10.6, popularly known as Snow Leopard, ahead of schedule and maybe within two weeks.
Apple has released a software update to OS X Leopard, probably the last major update before Snow Leopard is released next month, which includes a number of improvements and repairs several security flaws.
In all the hoopla around the introduction of the new iPhone 3GS and its new operating system, we seem to have lost sight of that other OS news: the pending introduction of Mac Snow Leopard.
The introduction of Snow Leopard, the newest Apple Mac operating system which will be released in September, also spells the end of the road for new OS software on pre-Intel Macs.
Earlier this week Apple’s white $999 MacBook got a slightly faster CPU and RAM, as well as the larger hard disc drive. Today, we learn that the company has also recently upgraded the displays used in its unibody MacBook.
Our favorite fruit company has for the second time this year quietly improved the base specs of their white polycarbonate consumer notebook. This round sees this best-selling product get a faster processor and memory, plus a bigger hard drive.
The real news here is that when the court hears the Miami, Florida-based Mac clone maker’s bankruptcy petition the world will finally learn the identity of the financiers, if any, behind the company. So, who do you think the mysterious gentleman or men behind the curtain are? Dell, perhaps?
Apple has told developers that the Snow Leopard beta released over the weekend contains the last changes that will be made in programming methodology before the release of the new operating system.
With the U.S. FTC investigating the sharing of a director between Google and Apple, Google CEO Eric Schmidt has spoken out saying there is no harm in the situation.

From the next-generation Macintosh operating system system department we’ve got good news and bad news. Which would you like to hear first?