Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 56 examens experts du Apple Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard et l'estimation moyenne est 86%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Apple Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard.
August 2009
(86%)
56 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
-
0 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
86010056
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Plus rapide que Leopard
Amélioration d'Exposé et de Dock
Prise en charge d'Exchange
Détecteur de logiciels malicieux intégré
Applications du système en 64 bits
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Nouvelle présentation QuickTime perfectible
Les nouvelles possibilités offertes pas encore exploitées par le matériel actuel
Conclusively, Mac OS X 10.6 – Snow Leopard – can be warmly recommended and, after a short time, the MacOS user won't want to forgo on the little innovations any more...
Easy installation, Takes up less hard drive space than Leopard, Inexpensive to upgrade, Several interface enhancements, Optimized for future multicore and graphics-rich apps
Only works on Intel-based Macs, Incompatible with some older applications, No third-party apps yet take advantage of GCD or OpenCL
Apple’s updated operating system is leaner, faster, and even more intuitive. And it’s ready to run the killer apps of tomorrow.
Inexpensive upgrade; conserves drive space; all major system apps are now 64-bit; QuickTime now offers media creation and editing, as well as playback
Doesnt add many new features; launch times are nearly the same for some applications
Apples Snow Leopard upgrade to Mac OS X emphasizes performance improvements over new features. For $29, its a no-brainer update for owners of Intel-based Macs. ...
Extrait: AppleREVIEW: Apple Snow Leopard Upgrade Provides Productivity EnhancementsBy: Cameron Sturdevant2009-09-01Article Rating: / 6 There are 0 user comments on this Apple story.Rate This Article:Poor Best E-mail Print PDF VersionEnd users may not immedia...
Extrait: Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger: 150+ new features In June of 2004, during the WWDC keynote address, Steve Jobs revealed Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger to developers and the public for the first time. When the finished product arrived in April of 2005, Tiger was the biggest,...
Easy, breezy setup. Snappier overall performance with smarter multitasking abilities. Grand Central Dispatch prepares us for superpowerful computers with multicore processors and tons of RAM (aka the World of Tomorrow). Nearly cheaper than a case of PBR.
Many apps, even Apples iMovie and iPhoto, are not yet written in 64bit. Annoying homogeneity to the "view all windows" view in Exposé. Quirky multitouch gesture behavior for MacBooks will make you feel like a chimpanzee trying to figure out calculus.
Extrait: Heath McKnight Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6), the new version of Apples 8+ year old operating system, Mac OS X, is an impressive upgrade from Leopard (10.5), which came out in late 2007. While it doesnt sport many new features as in years past, it doe...
Extrait: Snow Leopard isnt just a collection of new features. If that were it, Snow Leopard might not be a compelling upgrade. Instead, Snow Leopard builds a new foundation for speed and security combined with a boatload of nice touches that will make you sm...
Extrait: New releases of Apples Mac OS X operating system are highly anticipated because each one upgrades the Mac platform in the best way. That is, for Mac users, a new Mac OS X release is always like getting a new computer. Apple generally brags of hundred...
Simple install. Faster, leaner, future-proof. Exchange Server support. 64-bit goodness.
Most of the good gubbins are invisible. Where's the new swooshy stuff?
Snow Leopard will disappoint some of the Mac faithful, especially those without huge multi-core processors and anyone with a system older than three years. OS X 10.6 will currently only run on Intel-equipped Macs, and those sporting PowerPC architectur...