They announced Mountain Lion on Thursday February 16 2012... maybe they'll announce 10.9 tomorrow? That's assuming they're continuing with the yearly OS cycle.
If so, it'll be a let down I fear.
These fast cycles leave no time for innovation. Each successive release will simply seem like "updates" to the former.
Now how the heck does Ubuntu get dragged into an OSX 10.9 thread?Haven't you looked at Ubuntu? There's a huge amount of difference between 11.04 and 12.04. >_>;
Now how the heck does Ubuntu get dragged into an OSX 10.9 thread?
They announced Mountain Lion on Thursday February 16 2012... maybe they'll announce 10.9 tomorrow? That's assuming they're continuing with the yearly OS cycle.
Why tomorrow? Why not next week, this friday or next month?
Because Apple tend to do things in patterns, making "events" sort of predictable.
Yeah tomorrow is not the 16th of February.
If so, it'll be a let down I fear.
These fast cycles leave no time for innovation. Each successive release will simply seem like "updates" to the former.
If so, it'll be a let down I fear.
These fast cycles leave no time for innovation. Each successive release will simply seem like "updates" to the former.
They announced Mountain Lion on Thursday February 16 2012... maybe they'll announce 10.9 tomorrow? That's assuming they're continuing with the yearly OS cycle.
You must be joking, unless you're talking about a pre-pre-pre-DP version for developers only.
Obviously, as here.
Sure - let's just hope its "main" feature isn't integration with yet another social network.
What Social Network are they missing that matters?
Sure - let's just hope its "main" feature isn't integration with yet another social network.
Instagram or Vine!
What Social Network are they missing that matters?
I wasn't being serious, even if this wouldn't be surprising. It was just a general criticism to the way OS X has been updated over the last years...too much fluff from iOS and zero under-the-hood improvements or true innovative steps (FusionDrive excepted, perhaps).
I wasn't being serious, even if this wouldn't be surprising. It was just a general criticism to the way OS X has been updated over the last years...too much fluff from iOS and zero under-the-hood improvements or true innovative steps (FusionDrive excepted, perhaps).
If so, it'll be a let down I fear.
These fast cycles leave no time for innovation. Each successive release will simply seem like "updates" to the former.