Mountain Lion, the latest installment in Apple’s OS X, was released yesterday and brings the version to OS X 10.8. Available to download from the Mac App Store for the promised $19.99, it is a 4GB download and boasts some 200+ features as per Apple’s official page. We aren’t going to sit and count off each one on our fingers, but here’s a look at what’s new and noteworthy in the OS. Apple hasn’t just thought of what new features users need, it’s also executed them well keeping in mind the smooth UI it is well known for developing and maintaining. The new OS integrates better with its mobile counterpart, iOS, and even borrows a couple of features from it. Apps have been added or renamed to create a better, more integrated feel between Mac and iOS devices but with Apple, it is safe to say that no functionality has been lost. Twitter has been integrated and the promised Facebook integration will arrive later this year in Autumn. Some features of the OS, though not many, are tied to iOS 6 and while they are still there, will not be fully functional until the latest version of iOS is released to the masses.
Finder
Finder, the file browser in OS X, is pretty much unchanged except for the addition of two items. A share button which is a recurring addition to most things in OS X and the ability to encrypt drives from the the right-click context menu. The share option is a button added to the toolbar in Finder and it allows you to share a file or picture on Messages or Email it. This is going to make adding files to emails a lot faster and sharing a file or photo via the Chat client will be similarly convenient.
Other visual enhancements to the Finder include showing progress on the file icon when a file is being downloaded from a server or a drive. The progress bar will be similar to the one you see on the Launchpad icon when an app is downloading from the Mac App Store.
Safari 6.0
The latest version of Safari finally merges the URL bar and the Search bar into one. Sharing as a basic function has been integrated in Safari as well as allowing users to share their searches on Twitter, Mail and Messages.
Whether you looked something up on Google or browsed to a particular page on a website, the share button will copy the URL of the search and let you share it via Email, Tweet it or send it as an IM. This should make it easier to share those Easter Eggs you find on Google.
Mail looks and behaves pretty much the same as it did before with one slight enhancement that might turn out to be a real winner. You can now mark contacts as VIPs. Anyone who sends you important emails frequently like your boss, a team member or your Mom, will be given more importance and the feature will also act as a quick search filter for quickly viewing emails from that one contact.
Calendar
Again only small changes here and nothing noteworthy to speak of. A sidebar has been added to make it more convenient to switch to another month and to easily switch between the different calendars you’ve added. Changing the date of an event has been made easier with a date picker. The date picker opens when you click the date on an event. You can modify this date for an existing event or add the date to an event that lacks one.
Notes
The Notes app is one of the new ones in Mountain Lion. It is the same Notes app that you use on your iOS device and it has been ported to Mac as a default app. The wisdom behind it is of course to sync your notes, whether made on the desktop (Mac) or on a mobile device (iPad or iPhone) and ensure they are available on both. Many users complained that Stickies did not support this and there were a few apps available in the Mac App Store that brought the functionality to both devices. The Notes app does the same via iCloud. The interface is almost exactly the same as the one on iOS but since a desktop gives you more flexibility, the Notes app in Mac lets you create folders and add links and photos to a note. Notes can be pinned to your desktop and in effect, turn into stickies as well. The app has reasonable text formatting tools. Double click a note to open it in its own window i.e., in stickie mode. Click the side bar to add a folder or just hit Shift+Command+N.
Reminders
Reminders is yet another leaf taken from the books of iOS. The app is an almost exact replica of the iOS app with a few liberties taken since it is on the desktop and therefore has room to do more. In this case you can add lists of your own. On iOS you were limited to Reminders and Completed but the Mac version gives you complete freedom to add as many lists as you like and subsequently add reminders to those lists.
Game Center
Game Center is yet another app take from iOS. Sign in with your Apple ID and stats from games you’ve played on your iOS device will be listed as well as stats from OS X games that support Game Center. There aren’t very many of those just now but you can expect the number to increase. Seems as though Apple is interested in establishing itself as a gaming platform too, or it might just be another step in the unification with iOS. Only time will tell how developers will make use of it and how far it will go.
Contacts & Messages
Address Book has been renamed to Contacts and the new feature here is the groups you can create. Contacts has been integrated all across the OS and will make it easier for you to start group chat sessions in Messages app which itself pretty much the same as what it was when we reviewed it in Beta. The integration of Contacts here means that no matter where you have information coming in from i.e. an email, a Twitter ID or a Phone number, Contacts is going to gather it all in one place. It’s the one app to bind them all.
Preview & TextEdit
Sharing documents on Messages or adding them to emails and sharing pictures to Flickr, Facebook and Twitter is now a one button effort in Preview. Adding notes is much easier but perhaps what is the best feature added to this app is the ability to fill PDF forms. Finding a decent tool for filling in a PDF form isn’t easy and Apple obviously thought it was a basic enough need to include it in the Preview app. Take a PDF form, any type and open it. Preview will detect fields like text input areas and check boxes. Clicking on said fields will allow you to input data in them. You can check option boxes and radio buttons, the whole deal.
TxtEdit is yet another app that Apple has revamped and the changes are excellent if you plan on using iCloud. The home screen of the app is now divided into two tabs that allow you to access documents stored on your hard drive or access and upload them to iCloud. Adding a file to iCloud is as simple as dragging & dropping it. You can create a blank document as well and save it to cloud as opposed to your hard drive. As a bonus feature, you can now pinch to zoom in on text. I would personally like to see this particular gesture implemented all across the OS.
Launchpad & Dashboard
In Launchpad, you can now search for apps by typing their name in the search bar. The search bar appears across all the pages your apps are spread out on and searches as you type for apps that match. This is useful both for finding an app when you aren’t sure what it was called or when you have so many of them installed that you’re likely to overlook it in a manual search.
The same search feature has been implemented in Dashboard where you can also group widgets into folders. This is surprising since the number of Mac users unhappy with the Dashboard is more than those who are happy with it yet, Apple not only kept it around but gave it an iOS make-over and a new default background which kind of makes me miss the old one. Click and hold a widget and they start to quiver like the apps in Launchpad and a black cross appears over the ones you can delete. Finding new widgets has also been made easier with a little button at the bottom of the Dashboard that says More Widgets.
System Preferences
Lots of changes here; you will notice Notifications, Mail, Contacts & Calendars and Dictations & Speech as new items. If you dig deeper, you will see several new things in Security & Privacy. Each of these items are integrated system wide and are therefore managed from a central place in the OS.
Notification Center
This is yet another one of the more popular features in iOS; a notification system that integrates messages from apps. Whether it’s Apple’s answer to the popular Growl app or is just one more way to make OS X more like its mobile cousin, the notification center is likely to be well received. In addition to providing you notification from apps like Calendar, Reminder, Notes, Messages, Chrome, it also allows you to connect your Twitter account, send out Tweets and alerts you when you are mentioned in a Tweet or when you receive a Direct Message.
Like the notification center in iOS, you can choose to manually allow apps to send you notifications from Preferences. Any app can be added or removed. Apps that don’t support Mountain Lion will still use Growl so don’t think it’s a good idea to remove it just now and rely completely on the default notifications. A notification panel opens at the right of your screen when you click the newly added list like button at the right on the Menu Bar. This button which sits next to Spotlight lets you open/close the notification panel which works exactly the same way as it does in iOS.
ICloud
You will find iCloud integrated in just about every app possible; Mail, Contacts, Reminders, Notes, Safari, TextEdit, everything! The point is to give users a central place for storing everything ensuring that their data is available no matter where they go. When you first boot into Mountain Lion, you will have the choice to sign in with your Apple ID, and at the same time, enable iCloud. If you choose to skip the step, you can sign in and selectively enable apps from System Preferences.
Security & Privacy
Drive encryption has been added, as have restrictions for apps that have not been downloaded from the Mac App store. This is one feature that will have you drooling rainbows although, considering you have only one consolidated hard drive, encryption can take a while. Our’s took something like 8 hours to complete and is 500GB in size (not very large, just sufficient). All four tabs in this preference demand attention. You can set up encryption, from FireVault, manage which types of apps should be allowed to run from the General tab, exercise some serious control over the firewall from Firewall and lastly, manage which apps are using your location from the Privacy tab.
As mentioned above for several apps, Twitter is now everywhere in OS X. You can share pictures and web searches as well as send tweets all from Mountain Lion’s default feature. To link your Twitter account, visit Mail, Contacts & Calendars in System Preferences. Options for sharing on Twitter are present in Preview, Safari, TextEdit and Finder.
Screensavers
The Screensavers in Mountain Lion seem to have a new groove too. You can now have several images appear in different layouts and select a folder where the images will be pulled from. Additional options include typing a custom message, viewing art from iTunes or learning a new word everyday by selecting the Word of the day option.
In Summary
- Facebook integration, something that seems very exciting once you give Twitter a go; will sadly arrive in Autumn.
- Not all, but some features that tie the knot between iOS and OS X will be available only when iOS 6 rolls out, and this means a little less syncing and not as much universal iCloud support as you could hope.
- Yes, OS X is looking more and more like iOS; embrace it because it isn’t bad at all. Apple isn’t likely to retract it, but even if you do fail to get used to it, you can always count on there being an app to help you with that.
- Notification Centre is excellent and might just change your life. It is smart and knows when to pop up and when not to. More importantly, it comes with a flip switch for turning it off.
- Sharing & syncing are an integral part of Mountain Lion so you should actively be looking for the share button in the default apps at the very least. Hopefully as new apps arrive in the Mac App Store, you will find better use of the feature.
- You can now view the Mac App store in full screen mode.
- Dictionary has been improved and new ones have been added.
- QuickTime X has a better encoder and, as you can guess, has the same sharing options you will see in the default apps.
Conclusion
Mountain Lion did not bring a huge UI overhaul to the table, but there are certainly some new elements to the interface. Some might say the new features are really just something that should have been there to begin with, but that isn’t true for all of them. iCloud is going big as far as OS X is concerned. Bear in mind that you might not get a complete feel of what the OS is supposed to be like given most of us do not have iOS 6. Hopefully, with additional updates, the two will mesh well and give a better user experience than ever before. The new features open up new development prospects for apps while making a few of them obsolete. Perhaps the best thing that can be said for OS X Lion fans at this point is that none of Lion’s features have been axed. Some things have been renamed, but that really is as far as it goes, and settling into this new version should prove to be simple for most. Let us know what you think of Mountain Lion and stay tuned for more.
I've been exploring for a little bit for any high-quality articles or weblog posts on this sort of house . Exploring in Yahoo I ultimately stumbled upon this web site. Reading this information So i am glad to exhibit that I have an incredibly good uncanny feeling I discovered exactly what I needed. I such a lot indubitably will make certain to do not forget this site and provides it a glance on a relentless basis.
ReplyDeleteMy webpage : kalada.se
Thank you for another informative blog. Where else may I am
ReplyDeletegetting that kind of info written in such a perfect
approach? I've a project that I'm just now operating on,
and I've been on the look out for such info.
Feel free to surf my weblog :: facebook advertising
Thanks for your marvelous posting! I genuinely enjoyed reading it, you will be a great
ReplyDeleteauthor. I will make certain to bookmark your blog and
will come back someday. I want to encourage you continue
your great job, have a nice morning!
my web page :: facebook emoticons
WOW just what I was looking for. Came here by searching for popular facebook games
ReplyDeleteHere is my blog post blogspot.fr
Hello, i think that i saw you visited my blog thus i came to
ReplyDelete“return the favor”.I am trying to find things
to enhance my site!I suppose its ok to use some
of your ideas!!
Also visit my web site - absolutely free animations icons
This is really interesting, You're a very skilled blogger. I've joined
ReplyDeleteyour rss feed and look forward to seeking more of your magnificent
post. Also, I've shared your site in my social networks!
Feel free to visit my homepage ; facebook hacking
Hi! Quick question that's entirely off topic. Do you know how to make your site mobile friendly? My weblog looks weird when viewing from my iphone 4. I'm trying to find a template or plugin that
ReplyDeletemight be able to correct this problem. If you have any recommendations,
please share. Many thanks!
my webpage: duplicate content
If some one needs to be updated with hottest technologies afterward he must be go to see this web page and be up to date daily.
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my web site - zeusofsport.com
Hi I am so delighted I found your site, I really found you by
ReplyDeleteerror, while I was looking on Bing for something else, Nonetheless I am here now and would just like
to say thanks a lot for a remarkable post and a all round thrilling blog (I also
love the theme/design), I don't have time to look over it all at the minute but I have bookmarked it and also added in your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read more, Please do keep up the superb work.
Also visit my weblog - aaron johnson
It's going to be ending of mine day, however before ending I am reading this impressive paragraph to improve my knowledge.
ReplyDeleteHere is my homepage ; facebook dating
I'm not sure exactly why but this weblog is loading incredibly slow for me. Is anyone else having this issue or is it a problem on my end? I'll check back later and see if the problem still exists.
ReplyDeleteFeel free to visit my homepage :: facebook Fan Page
Hi, I would like to subscribe for this webpage to obtain newest updates, thus where can i do it please
ReplyDeletehelp out.
My homepage : aarons rent to own center
I blog often and I really appreciate your content.
ReplyDeleteYour article has really peaked my interest. I am going to take a note of your blog and keep checking for new details about once per week.
I subscribed to your Feed too.
Here is my web page : www.nighstar.net
I have been browsing online more than 3 hours today, yet I never
ReplyDeletefound any interesting article like yours. It is pretty worth enough for me.
Personally, if all webmasters and bloggers made
good content as you did, the web will be much more useful than ever before.
Also see my web site - http://www.your-pagerank.Com/seostats/audiotestberichte.de
Someone essentially assist to make significantly posts I'd state. That is the very first time I frequented your web page and to this point? I amazed with the analysis you made to create this actual put up amazing. Magnificent process!
ReplyDeleteHere is my webpage ... read the source
Feel free to surf my page psychic reading paypal
What's up mates, nice paragraph and good arguments commented here, I am genuinely enjoying by these.
ReplyDeleteTake a look at my website ... goof.g33k.in
My web page ; organ enlargement
I really love your website.. Great colors & theme.
ReplyDeleteDid you build this website yourself? Please reply back as I'm looking to create my own personal website and would love to know where you got this from or what the theme is called. Appreciate it!
my homepage fat loss customized (customizedfatlossreviews1.webs.com)
I uѕеd to bе recommended tҺis website bү way of my cousin.
ReplyDeleteӀ'm ոow not positive աhether oг not this put սp is written through
him as noboɗy еlse know ѕuch detailed ɑpproximately mʏ trouble.
Yoou aare wonderful! Тhank ƴou!
Mү homepage :: cheap car insurance quotes online