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Apple lets Tiger out of bag

Updated Mac OS X goes on sale Friday

Image: Steve Jobs at MacWorld.
Apple chief executive Steve Jobs talks about Mac OS X during his keynote address at MacWorld in San Francisco. The latest update to the operating system, dubbed "Tiger," goes on sale nearly 18 months before Microsoft's next-generation of Windows.
Ben Margot / AP
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REVIEW
By Matthew Fordahl
updated 3:41 p.m. ET April 28, 2005

Tired of waiting while your PC slowly scours its hard drive for a document you stashed somewhere six months ago? Sick of having to change how you work to conform with the computer’s rigid way of organizing files? Bored with the flat look of the desktop’s graphics?

Microsoft’s next-generation operating system for Windows, code-named Longhorn, is supposed to address such digital woes. It may even be released in time for Christmas 2006.

(MSNBC is a Microsoft - NBC joint venture.)

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But if you’ve got a Macintosh computer, or plan to buy one, those issues have been tackled. They’re amply addressed in the latest update of Mac OS X, dubbed “Tiger,” goes on sale Friday.

Despite a much smaller user base, Mac OS X has been steps ahead of Windows on key fronts since its first release in 2001. It’s got more advanced and polished graphics. It’s less prone to malicious attacks. And Macs look better than nearly all Windows PCs.

Until recently, Apple has been dogged by a reputation for high prices. Its computers now start at $499, and the number of programs that run on them has grown dramatically. Tiger provides another excellent incentive to switch from Windows.

I’ve been trying out Tiger on a borrowed iMac G5 and my own dual-processor Power Mac G4. New Mac users will get it with their systems; existing customers must pay $129 for the upgrade. (The update was simple, taking about an hour.)

Topping the list of 200 or so improvements in Tiger is a built-in search tool that goes a long way toward relieving one of the biggest headaches that’s plagued computers.

That is, as hard drive capacity grows and our digital universe broadens to include text, music, video, e-mail, pictures and everything else, information gets lost in the shuffle of folders scattered across gigabytes of hard drive real estate.

Operating systems have been designed to pigeonhole that data into a hierarchy of folders. But what if a document, song or picture fits into five or six different categories, each with its own folder? If you choose one, how will you remember it a year from now?


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