Apple reveals Leopard's new desktop design
Posted on 12 Jun 2007 at 10:07
Apple has unveiled a radically overhauled desktop for OS X. The desktop environment in Leopard sports a 3D Dock, a new Stacks feature, a new Finder and QuickLook, a tool for previewing files without opening applications.
3D Dock
Changes to the Dock are largely aesthetic, with 3D-effect icons standing up from the Dock platform. But the Dock is also the home for the new Stacks - smart folders that display their contents by fanning out or presenting themselves as a grid.
Stacks can be used to group frequently used or related items, much like smart folders in Tiger but with an improved interface. They could also be used as an application launcher, for instance. One stack will be included with new Leopard installations: all downloads will automatically be added to this by default, rather than sprayed on the desktop.
Finder
The new Finder takes iTunes' Cover Flow interface to browse for files rather than music. And once you have located a file, QuickLook lets you preview it without having to open its application.
The Finder also adds Bonjour file sharing - no more fiddling with IP or AFP addresses to mount remote volumes, even Windows volumes - and there's Spotlight searching of those volumes.
.Mac remote access
And .Mac subscribers will be able to access Macs remotely direct from the Finder. Macs automatically tell .Mac their IP address, so that .Mac can enable them to talk to each other. Files and folders can then be copied from one to another within the Finder as if they were on the same local network.
QuickLook pretty much does what it says. Select a file and you can have a quick look at hat it contains, full-screen if you desire. Select a presentation and a set of controls appear for flipping through the slides; click on a video and movie files appear.
These features of the new-look desktop were the highlight of Apple CEO Steve Jobs' presentation, covering 10 of Leopard's 300 new features.
Jobs' 64-bit guarantee
Feature number four was Jobs' guarantee that 64-bit applications will run on every copy of Leopard. Unlike Windows Vista there will not be separate 64-bit and 32-bit apps.
'Leopard really will be the first time that 64-bit goes mainstream in the PC world,' Jobs said. For users, the difference will be apparent only in performance.
The remaining six features had already been seen in Jobs' first Leopard preview 10 months ago. These include Core Animation, Boot Camp, Spaces virtual desktops, Dashboard with point-and-click tools for building custom widgets, iChat Theatre for sharing documents in real time plus the addition of Photo Booth effects for iChat video chats, and Time Machine, which will automate backing up in 'a simple way that people actually use'.
Rumoured new features that did not materialise included a virtualisation engine for running Windows. But Jobs intimated that Apple is very happy with the 'fantastic' work in this area being done by Parallels and VM Ware.
'We have three great solutions,' Jobs said.
Analyst response
This disappointed Shaw Wu, analyst at American Technology Research, who described Jobs' keynote as 'underwhelming'.
'The announcements were more around user-interface changes rather than something more radical,' Wu said. 'So I think that was disappointing and investors were hoping for more.'
Investor's Business Daily said that Apple shareholders were disappointed at the lack of a 'wow' announcement, with Apple's share price falling 3.5 per cent after the keynote closed.
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