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Some Leopard shipments delayed

Quickly…

TUAW reports that Leopard shipments in some areas have been delayed. These delays are mostly delays of few hours. I’ve been bitten by the delay as well; my copy was supposed to arrive by 10:30 A.M., at 9:21 this morning I got a Delivery exception message ("Future delivery requested").

I’ve waited months for Leopard. I can wait a couple more hours. wink



Days of Leopard: What to do before and after installing Leopard [UPDATED x2]

Leopard’s release is mere hours away here in the United States. Is your Mac ready for Apple’s next big cat? Here are some steps you can take to get your Mac up and running with Leopard.

Before you upgrade

Decide if you should upgrade right away

If you are on a PowerPC Mac and rely on Classic apps for whatever reason, do not upgrade to Leopard. Leopard does not support the Classic environment.

If you rely on your Mac for your business (e.g. you are a freelance designer and require Creative Suite to work flawlessly), you may want to hold off on installing Leopard until the third-party vendors you rely on can ensure that their products will work with Leopard. Additionally, some users choose to hold off on upgrading until the initial release bugs are fixed. The choice is yours.

Disable system hacks

If you are not planing a clean install, remove or disable any system-wide hacks. This includes haxies, Input managers, and other hacks you may have applied to the operating system. Note that as of now, Unsanity has not confirmed that their haxies will work with Leopard. Some haxies and other system hacks may cause conflicts with Leopard.…
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Security researchers warn of iPhone vulnerability

An article in Wired News today warns of a potential security hazard in the iPhone:

...every application on the device—from the calculator on up—runs as “root,” i.e., with full system privileges. As a result, a serious vulnerability in any of these applications would allow hackers to gain complete control of the device.

While there are no published exploits for this vulnerability yet, and it is unlikely any will show up soon, security experts are warning that it may be only a matter of time, and any attacks that take advantage of this could have dire consequences:

With the limited bandwidth of the iPhone, malicious code would be unlikely to slow portions of the internet. But malware could wreak creative havoc of a different kind. It might, for example, cause a phone to call numbers without the user’s knowledge, seize text messages and a list of received and sent calls, turn the phone into a listening device, track the user’s location through nearby WiFi access points, or instruct the phone to snap photos of the user’s surroundings—including any companions who may be in view of the camera lens.

Apple plans to release an SDK to allow third parties to develop applications for the iPhone, but said it was working on ways to maintain the device’s security while doing so.



Days of Leopard: Musings on the Finder

Uploaded Image

For legions of Mac OS X users, “Fix the F***ing Finder” has become a mantra, a battle call, if you will. For years, the Finder has gone mostly ignored, with little in the way of serious improvements. Sure Panther added the sidebar, but by and large the Finder has not seen much in the way of major enhancements since OS X’s release. The Finder needs a bit of help. Does Leopard finally fix the Finder?

Since we are still three days away from Leopard’s launch, all most of us--myself included--have to go off of as of now are screenshots of the Finder and videos posted on Apple’s web site. All I can do for now is speculate.

Finder’s flaws

In his many Mac OS X reviews over the years, John Siracusa of Ars Technica has dedicated a good portion of each review to the state of the FInder. In 2003, he wrote a ten-part essay on what was wrong with the Finder (at that point, Jaguar was the current OS X release) and how Apple could go about fixing it. His biggest gripes are, among other things, the lack of a true spatial (one window per folder) Finder and general…
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Days of Leopard: Mac developers gear up for Leopard

With Leopard’s release mere days away, Mac developers are starting to post information on how their apps will work under Leopard, and posting updates if necessary. This will be an ongoing list of news from Mac developers regarding Leopard compatibility. Go ahead and bookmark this page, because it will be updated as we learn more.

DEVELOPERS: If you have any information regarding Leopard compatibility and want to let us know, leave a comment or shoot us an email: .

Disclaimer

Note that at this time it is impossible to guarantee compatibility with the final release of Leopard until users get their hands on Leopard. With that in mind, take this information as a guidance, but not as a guarantee that applications will work with the final, shipping version of Leopard.

At any rate, here is Leopard compatibility info from various developers, in no particular order.

Panic

According to Cabel Sasser’s blog, Panic’s apps should run fine on Leopard for the most part. Transmit has a couple issues with Leopard, but an update to correct these issues is forthcoming.

Unsanity

At this time, Unsanity has not released any information on Leopard compatibility. Watch this space for more updates.

UPDATE: Unsanity has posted a compatibility info page.

M Cubed

According to the M Diced blog, Code Collector and Code Collector Pro should work fine in Leopard. There may be some minor issues with Minim, however.

Rogue Amoeba

The company has announced Fission 1.5.2, which adds Leopard support. See also this post in their company blog.

Delicious Monster

No official word regarding Delicious Library 1.6.6 yet; version 2.0 will be a Leopard-only release, though a release date has not yet been announced.

Plasq

No announcements yet. site

ThinkMac Software

No announcements yet. site

Flying Meat

No announcements yet. site

Realmac

Realmac deems RapidWeaver 3.6.4 to be “Leopard ready.”

MacRabbit

CSSEdit has been updated for Leopard (version 2.6).

FileMaker

Oddly enough, FileMaker Pro 9 and its various editions is not compatible with Leopard. The irony? FileMaker is a subsidiary of Apple.

The Omni Group

The Omni Group has posted Leopard compatibility information for their applications.

Blacktree

Quicksivler has been updated for LEopard. Their site is down at the moment, but here is the VersionTracker link.

Previous Days of Leopard articles

Days of Leopard is Deep Thought’s series of Leopard-related articles posted in the days leading up to and immediately following Leopard’s launch on October 26, 2007. Collect them all!



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