Psystar simply doesn’t know when to quit. Despite being in the midst of a lawsuit with Apple, they continue to push their luck. Not only are they offering free Leopard restore disks to their customers, Psystar has also confirmed that the Mac clones are “definitely still shipping.” They had better hope that their fancy Palo Alto-based Carr & Ferrell lawyers can back up all of this machismo. [InformationWeek]
As you’ve probably heard, the next version of OS X, Snow Leopard, will not wow us with a crazy circus of features like Time Machine and Boot Camp. So why would Apple spend a year programming an OS that they can’t boast has over 300 new features? Here’s a quick rundown of how Apple is totally rebuilding OS X to take advantage of Core 2 Duos, graphics cards and parallel processing, in order to deliver serious performance gains. And yes, that is a big deal.
Reader Mark’s brother just sent over this pic of an “OS X iPhone” banner found on the WWDC show floor in Moscone Centre. You can’t really tell much from the shot (no 3G iPhone leaked), but it does look like iPhone will be a big topic next Monday–something we’ve known for a while. Crunchgear also found these shots by Gernot on Flickr which also shows OS X Leopard.
As unlikely as the rumour is that OS X 10.6 is going to debut at WWDC next week, both Ars Technica and TUAW have independently verified from their sources that the next version of the OS could be coming as soon as Macworld 2009. Ars also says that the code name is Snow Leopard, which on the surface latches on weirdly to the current Leopard name. But when you think about the rumour that 10.6 will only be performance upgrades, UI changes and switching to being Intel-only, that code-name kinda starts to make sense as a final label.
The Hackintosh 10.5.3 Combo Update has just been released, letting people who want to build their own Mac on the cheap update to the latest Leopard version. According to people familiar with Hackintoshes and running OS X on whitebox computers (Adam Pash), the update was released in record time this cycle. Way to go, dude who worked on this. [Infinite Mac]
iPhone’s sixth SDK has just been released, adding support for the latest iPhone OS and fixing various bugs. You’ll have to update to Leopard 10.5.3, which was released earlier today. That’s right, you HAVE TO. Not sure why, but that’s what Apple’s saying. [Apple]
Mac Software Update now contains Leopard OSX version 10.5.3, which addresses issues with AirPort and other networking reliability, and resolves a few Time Machine and Time Capsule problems—Aperture is now compatible, we’re told. It also has improved Spaces usability. Check it out and let us know if you find anything else out. [Apple]
Psystar, the company that’s shipping hacked versions of OS X Leopard in off-the-shelf hardware, has just updated their product to address some of the main complaints in their recent reviews. The biggest change is that they’re rigging up a custom version of Automatic Update (the thing that didn’t work at all in their old version) to push “safe” updates from their site, not directly from Apple. That’s because installing updates from Apple would possibly break their hacked version of Leopard, forcing all their customers to send back units for repair.
Today Apple revealed its plans for WWDC, confirming that the Jobsnote this year will take place 10AM PST on Monday, June 9, rather than the usual Tuesday. (No word as to whether the turtleneck will still be black, or if the 3G iPhone will actually be present.) The WWDC will of course have two separate tracks, one for iPhone and one for OS X. More info at Apple’s WWDC website, or in the press release after the jump. UPDATE: Some things we tend to forget repeatedly around here—WWDC keynotes are always on Monday, Macworld Jobsnotes are the ones that are always on Tuesday. My bad!