20 Oct
   Filed Under: Apple, Design, Icon Design   

Apple has announced the release of Leopard, the newest incarnation of Mac OS X. Amongst 300+ new features, it also boasts several graphic enhancements like resolution independence, 512 pixel icons, a reflective dock and new a unified ‘theme’ for application windows. Now, only days before the release, I want to show you some of the major improvements and additions to the Mac software aesthetic.

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30 Jun
   Filed Under: Apple, Personal   

A good friend has helped me out with this; as a lucky owner of a great brain and an iPhone, he’s shot these images for me;

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As you can see, that looks totally gorgeous. I’ve also seen some pictures of my mail and my personal work, but I won’t bore you with this further. I just thought this was pretty awesome.

29 Jun
   Filed Under: Apple, Design   

Well, if you ever wanted some higher-res images of the arrows in the iPhone or were wondering what Apple will do to integrate Apple.com and the iPhone, here’s a scoop;

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Also, as you can see in the Downloads section, all rollovers are disabled when you use an iPhone. Obvious, but clever that they’ve got it all in line. Speaking of which (this is unrelated to the post’s topic), Apple Downloads…

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I was put on it overnight, this time around (thanks guys!) and, as the day is progressing, I have already transferred about 5 gigabyte of icon material. That’s neat! An excellent reception of the icon set and something that will definitely encourage me to make a second one. As I said, pass on requests and icon ideas in the last post.

Thanks, everyone at Macthemes and Apple.com – the input and downloads are appreciated. More cool unveilings very soon.

28 Jun
   Filed Under: Apple   

It’s a word we’ve been associating with OS 9. OS X has a ‘Classic’ mode to run legacy OS 9 applications, but we’re looking at a whole new ‘classic’ now.

Security in Leopard has had a roadmap of its own – after several developer builds in 2006, it became apparent that there was a lot of attention from Apple to invest in security; perhaps following the Month of Apple Bugs, but, most likely, to prove that now OS X is gaining is it’s user base, is still ‘the most secure desktop operating system’.

After WWDC ’07, a few things have become more clear to me. What first was a loosely affiliated set of securing elements, has become an extremely intuitive addition to the standard way of doing things. A good example of how flawless these new security-improving additions are, I’ll take an example that’s just freshly new. In Tiger, we get a dialog when we open an application for the first time. It’s an informative dialogue, but it’s not really helping us in terms of finding out where the hell we got it. In Leopard, as you might have seen, there is a new downloading system. Downloads are placed in a new ‘downloads’ folder and in a download stack in the Dock, and even cooler, once you open a downloaded application for the first time, it pops up the same familiar dialogue. However, this time, it also shows where you downloaded it, and when. With a minimal addition, the user’s ability to stay secure has gained a lot.

Another good example are InputManagers. The ‘classic’ Tiger hacks that allow you to modify code at runtime, are disabled by default in Leopard. However, placing an InputManager file in the correct folder prompts you if you want to enable them. Safe by default, perhaps quite to the contrary when you compare it with Tiger.

Overall, there are a lot of things I don’t want to mention or cannot mention because they haven’t been shown in the SteveNote or otherwise broadly carried by the blogosphere. Some of these are so non-obvious that people just don’t bother to find out, I guess. But I can guarantee you that you’re in for a completely new experience once you switch from Tiger to Leopard. And it won’t be like going from XP to Vista; you’ll actually feel like you’re more in control, all the while clicking less buttons to achieve that feeling.

Apple has a very clear message; I think that once Apple is around to releasing Leopard, you can go ahead and write malware; see if it works. In an OS that has code-signing, sandboxing, and other fantastic new hardening efforts all built-in, we’re safe. I think I’ll have some vacation instead of having to write a new “A more secure OS X before 10.6” ;).

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26 Jun
   Filed Under: Apple, Design, Icon Design   

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Sent by an anonymous source, this supposedly shows the new iPhoto fullscreen navigation. Some specific features of the new interface were omitted.

11 Jun
   Filed Under: Apple, Design, Popular   

Just a treat. Enjoy this Leopard wallpaper as a gift from Icon Designer ;).

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Thanks for the downloads! This image has seen about 6000 downloads since it’s inception two days ago, and I’ll make a version without the ‘mess’ behind it for release soon.