Leopard early adopters suffer for the rest of us
I can't decide whether early adopters are saints or fools.
Mac OS X Leopard, the latest version of Apple's operating system, turns one week old today. An estimated 9 percent of the Mac OS X installed base had already signaled their intention to upgrade last weekend, and those numbers presumably grew by some degree over the last few days.
Most Leopard users seem satisfied. But there have been a fair amount of complaints from those who were first down the road to Leopard. Most are relatively minor, some were quite annoying, and a few raise questions about how Apple's operating system strategy might be different when it's time to ship the next release.
Leopard is here, and overall things went fairly well, but it's never easy if you want to be first on your block with something new.
(Credit: Apple)The "blue screen" problem perhaps got the most attention because it made for a delightful comparison to the infamous Windows "blue screen of death," and because it was frustrating as hell for those who had gone through the entire installation process only to derail right at the end. MacFixIt is keeping a running tally of other problems reported with incompatible applications, wireless networking and .Mac accounts, and user accounts.
There was grumbling among some of the design geeks regarding the aesthetic choices made by Apple's designers, the new folder design appearing to take the brunt of the criticism. The whole debate about transparent docks or folder icons is a little beyond me, but I do think the wavy Stacks thing is a little off-putting, and some of the icons are more confusing now than in Tiger.
And some in the developer community, most audibly Java developers, are up in arms over Apple's failure to include support for Java 6 in Leopard. They see it as another example of Apple's iron-fisted control over its developers, in that the company assumed the Father Knows Best role even though Java 6 is the latest and greatest version of that development environment.
Can you compare Leopard's first week to Tiger's, or perhaps (if you're in a sardonic mood) to Vista's? There certainly was no Leopard-related disaster, and if you measure it by sales, it was a success. As I read all of the reviews, nits, and obsequious literary odes to Leopard trotted out over the past week, I kept coming back to a few things.
First of all, the point I referenced in the opening: let's give thanks to the early adopters, however masochistic they may be. You can do all the QA in the world before releasing an operating system, and it's not going to compare to what happens when the unwashed masses get their hands on the product.
Microsoft's Windows Vista had years of developer releases, and was released to manufacturing several weeks before it went on sale to the general public. Still, compatibility problems cropped up because it's extremely difficult to anticipate what people are running, and in what combination. It's easier for Apple because it tightly controls its hardware and software, and because there are fewer potential combinations in the wild, but it's still a Herculean task.
Those people willing to be first-on-their-block with an operating system bear a disproportionate brunt of the slings and arrows to identify the problems that will be fixed in time for the rest of us. But did they go through more pain than was necessary?
Leopard had already been delayed several months to make way for the iPhone. The last-minute removal of some features promised for Leopard, such as Time Machine support for external hard drives plugged into a wireless router, could have been a signal that Apple was hard-pressed to make the late October deadline for Leopard.
That brings me to my second point: Apple's culture of secrecy can backfire. One of the reasons Apple has such a hold on the tech industry is that it keeps any thoughts it might have about the future of computing to itself. Most tech companies fall over themselves trying to trumpet their vision for what's over the next bend. Apple and CEO Steve Jobs come down from on high four or five times a year to introduce new products and hint at the future, and that's about it.
This, of course, creates the whirl of speculation and buzz that, along with the fact that they've mostly been releasing things that people want to buy, helps sell Apple gear. But it also creates distrust and paranoia, especially among those that depend on Apple's products for their livelihoods.
Many of the developer-related complaints stem from the fact that Apple held the "Gold Master" (or Golden Master, depending on your tolerance for semantics) final release of Leopard until the day it officially launched. Presumably, the company wanted to avoid a repeat of previous leaks: copies of both Leopard and Tiger appeared on file-sharing sites well ahead of their release, and the leak of a final version would be much more serious.
Apple's desire to prevent Leopard piracy shouldn't strike anyone as odd. But developers depend on that final release to make sure their applications will work properly with the final code, and if they don't have enough time to do that, problems will crop up during the upgrade process.
So, perhaps it's a question of balance: is the threat of a few leaked copies of Leopard greater than the pain suffered by early adopters slogging their way through a buggy upgrade? It's not hard to imagine Apple taking the first point more seriously, but the most likely scenario is probably that Jobs made October a "final" deadline for Leopard's release, and anything that wasn't ready by then would just have to wait until a later point release.
That would mean there was probably a scramble to set the final release, which wasn't formally released to developers until the day it was released to everyone. That also ensured that developers had no way of knowing whether the bugs they pointed out during the seeding process (where incremental builds of the operating system are released to developers under NDA) were fixed in the final copy until it hit stores last Friday. That's not the sort of thing that makes them all excited about working with Apple.
By the time the next Big Cat comes along, some may wonder whether Apple will have to change its spots when it comes to taking care of its developers. If the Mac really does start to take serious chunks of market share, will Apple have to be more friendly to developers, even if that comes at the risk of leaks?
I'm still not sure we're anywhere near that point. Apple's pitch for Macs revolves around its own lifestyle applications, like iLife and iTunes. It doesn't have the same incentive to court developers that Microsoft does (click here for Microsoft's view of developers) because it doesn't build operating systems for developers, PC companies, or IT departments. It builds them for people.
As long as Jobs is around, I can't see a new touchy-feely Apple on the horizon. And right now, there's no need for them to change: they've proven they can get to this point (mostly) on their own. It will, however, be very interesting to see if they can get to a higher place without more help from the outside, or whether they even want to take that step.
Mac OS X 10.5.1 will likely arrive around Thanksgiving with fixes for most of the problems encountered by the brave early adopters. I still don't quite understand what motivates people to go through that process, but I do wonder if more people would be willing to take the early plunge if they could be assured of fewer problems. Next time, however, Apple might not have spent the entire year launching next products, and can take more time to focus on the release itself.
Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Internet search, including Google, Yahoo, online advertising, and portals, as well as the evolution of mobile computing. He has written about traditional PC companies, chip manufacturers, and mobile computers, spending the last three years covering Apple. E-mail Tom. 






Leopard. I am sure some of the problems relate more to older
applications and third party software that was not updated to
run Leopard. I really think a OS upgrade is a big deal and people
should do more homework about compatibility with their system
before jumping in. We all know Apple ditches older compatibility
sooner than Microsoft. This is a good thing for a OS. One reason
Microsoft has so much trouble with Windows. But it can leave
people scratching their head as to why Leopard did not install.
first adopters (I received my copy before 10am on Release
Friday) I had absolutely no problems with the upgrade process
on two iMacs.
However, your comment about ditching older compatibility
sooner than MS? Come on now! Here we are in 10.5 and only
now dropping Classic? Granted, we're also dropping the G3 Macs
from the process now, but the G3 is almost as old as Classic
itself. My G3 iMac died of old age 2 years ago, though I admit
my G3 iBook is still going strong. Even Vista forced significant
upgrades to even currently available PCs when it came out; you
can't say that about Apple.
Why I?m not worried? What I need to do has not been interrupted, or put in jeopardy, both Macs (my mom and mine are working pretty well, even with old hardware like my USB Sound Sticks)
Still, I'm very happy with the new OS X (Some windows users will say that Apple charges too much for service packs, bla, bla, bla...) but still I feel it is a solid upgrade of OS and the functionality will only get better as the OS matures.
-Frank
edge. I had no problems with my upgrade install of Leopard (other
than the known incompatibilities) but I sort of wished I had more.
Solving problems is a fun challenge and a measure of one's
knowledge and skill.
I guess computers are more than just tools for some of us... they
are also a hobby!
problems....my 15" G4 Powerbook has been both a hardware and
software mess. My intel 20" iMac has slowed down to a crawl.
Safari is a piece of crap....almost at bad at IE.
The only machine that is operating without any problems, but is
amazing slow is my 12" G4 powerbook. Every machine I have is
maxed out on RAM, has plenty of hard drive space and has
nothing but mainstream, licensed software. My guess is that is
Apple is releasing software products with a very sloppy QA
process and uses the post release period to fix "the wheels that
squeak the most!"
Now, I am hoping that Leopard will install OK and will help to fix
some of the software related operating issues.
If the hardware doesn't improve I am in a real quandry as to
what to buy next.....I hate Wintel machines......and I don't want
to mess around with Linux boxes.....but Apple's quality control
issues have soured my "fanboy" outlook.
your machines, then reinstall your Apps one by one, testing to
see where your problems are. I'm running a variety of G4 based
machines at home and at work, all worked fine in Tiger and have
taken to Leopard with no problems, the only minor bumps were
3rd party drivers and such that couldn't handle Leopard.
If you haven't already, please bring your issues to the forums at
sites like www.macobserver.com and macfixit.com, the people
there will be happy to help you if at all possible.
have installed a lot of cruft, and you need to run DiskUtility, and
Disk Warrior for starters. I had a friend who complained to me
about this, and when I looked at his machine, it was clear he
was a software addict. He had just about every kind of crap
installed, all over the place, with no idea as to what he was
doing to his machine. Look, for starters, at your startup items.
Cut as many of them as possible, and start them when you want
to run it only. Look at your running processes. Empty caches.
Learn how to maintain your machine.
Within two weeks of my looking at my friend's machine, and
putting it into some order, everything was running fine. Two
months later, he had loaded it up with crap again.
Apple can't do anything right and should follow Microsoft's
lead... or just give up and let Microsoft have it all.
In all honesty, every new version of an OS is going to have its
teething pains; some more severe than others. It seems to me
that, at least for me, there were fewer problems in the OS X
upgrades than there were in each and every version of Windows
produced, with the exception of XP Pro. Yes, some people will
have problems, but the majority of them haven't and won't, I'm
sure.
Maybe if developers could adhere to the NDAs then Apple wouldn't
be so iron-fisted.
time and haven't had any problems.
I am a web designer who looked forward to the next release of
Safari, that is why I installed the operating system so soon.
I have installed bad OS updates with previous Mac operating
systems. (10.2) I think with any update you just have to be sure
to have your HD backed up and get ready for a bad OS update
and problems. That is just reality. You may have bad hardware
or software that could cause problems.
is going to have a few kinks to work out. But please. The look of
the folder icon? I find it hard to get worked up about it. "...some of
the icons are more confusing now than in Tiger..."?? It really
sounds like someone told you to write an article that focussed on
the negative. For me, this was one of the smoothest transitions
from one OS to the next that I've every experienced. I think most
people would say the same.
it"
I was one who initially didn't like the look of the new folder icons,
and the transparency of menus, but after 6.5 days of using Leopard
I am in a new comfort zone.
down.
another but it seems fair compared to the rest of the cnet mumbo
jumbo. I am glad to have been lucky with all three of my machines,
PM G5 home office, MBP C2D home laptop and MacPro office. All
three have gone through the upgrade without a hitch. Only
affected app is Photoshop 7 RIP, long, long EOL before even CS1, 2
or 3...
and goes out of its way to support CUPS shares. Maybe you just
didn't configure it right?
enough to change the CUPS settings in Leopard.
The only unexpected bug was early on. Sound would stutter upon playback of DVDs or iTunes music. This has since gone away on it's own, perhaps due to Spotlight indexing at the same time? While we have told all of our customers to hold off until Christmas, about 5% insist on being early adopters, so we had to as well. And so far, none who have used the Archive and install or clean install to a new second drive (then import settings) have experienced issues. No Blue screen, no loss in data.
in case. Yesterday I erased it nd made a full back-up of my new
operating system, Leopard. Not a single glitch.. It worked 100%
for me. It feels more responsive than Tiger and I love the new
features.
Unlike the author of this piece, I don't get upset because a
"FOLDER ICON CHANGES", so maybe he considers this a critical
issue but I don't.
customer and Solaris user, I can see the advantages of using ZFS
even on non-root volumes. Apple's implementation however as
with Sun's, only works correctly on 64-bit systems, as there are
glaring performance problems for those using it on 32-bit
platforms. I am using it on a Core 2, so I don't have the
performance issues. However, there are obvious implications to
those using it in place of /Users, namely finder glitches with
how paths are determined, and how the volumes show up as if
they were an external volume. (IE: you must command + drag to
move even though it's the same disk) It is a beta, and the
implementation was started around half way point in Leopard
development. ZFS is hardly unstable, but don't use it for your
home, it mounts last, so you'd need to disable autologin, and on
top of the Finder bugs, applications like EyeTV can't work with it
because either a bug in the Cocoa I/O or the ZFS
implementation itself hinders correct self-awareness of location.
Java is a big issue, I have one good thing to say though, the look
and feel of applications such as Deskzilla from ALMWorks which
used the ugly brushed metal in Tiger looks perfect in Leopard.
That's the end of the praise though, Java 6 has been available as
a release and for early adopters for 2 years. Java 6 offers
numerous performance enhancements and visual fixes, as well
as being a full open-source implementation, still able to be
used commercially, and Apple failed to adopt it as they are
pushing their native framework and Objective-C. While I agree
the performance suffers with Java, and Objective-C is bare
metal, let the developers tune their applications and let them
suffer if it's really that bad. Many enterprise customers are still
using 5.0, so it's less of an issue than people think, and it has to
do with stability and Apple specific portions of the
implementation.
Finder got better and worse at the same time. Extract a zip file
for example, and the extracted file overlays the other to the
lower right underneath the archive. This is just retarded, Tiger
didn't do it, no other OS has this dumb of a glitch. Finder still
doesn't sort directories first, and I found out it has something to
do with HFS+ because there's times where FAT32 volumes don't
do this. Performance is better with large file copy operations,
but is slower when copying lots of small files.
Spotlight's indexer is obtrusive, forceful. It's not very smart to
force users to index disks, even those they're borrowing from a
friend, or pendrives. Pendrives have a limited write capability,
and spotlight will degrade its life by constantly indexing. The
indexer is faster and it shows more information when running,
but this doesn't fix the qualms of it being ran without option to
disable on anything and everything local.
Mail indexes and copies every single message on a POP3/IMAP
mailbox, there should be an option to ONLY check Inbox. It's
very annoying especially for dial-up or satellite users, or those
with temporarily high latency to deal with it indexing the whole
mailbox.
iTunes is the same one in Tiger, and there's visual glitches with
theming in preferences.
The only applications that seem to be tried and true without
major annoyances are iChat and Terminal.
I applaud them for making iLife 06 work, cause iMovie 08 is
gimped with its abilities for some reason. Most applications still
work, granted they're not interfacing with the kernel through
kexts, as the only application that worked which wasn't for
Leopard was EyeTV 2.5, released about a month before GA.
Devices such as keyspan are still using PowerPC portions for
some dumb reason, as with others (MIcrosoft) so it's a sad story
to tell.
I feel it was dumb on their part to force developers to wait till
the same time customers bought the OS, they needed that extra
2-4 weeks to test on the GA, but couldn't. You can't imagine
how annoyed some developers are at having to scramble.
Customers rightfully are complaining, but they should be
complaining to Apple.
Now about Microsoft, RDC is STILL in beta, Microsoft Office is
never going to have a public beta even though they already don't
have enough QA people for the MacBU. They won't release until
Jan, 2008, leaving people to run Office 2004 on Leopard when
they need it, suffering even more issues than Tiger on Intel
users. Silverlight the oh so great Flash killer as they call it still
doesn't work on Safari 3, even though they've had a beta for 6
months to get it working.
All in all, small issues, aside from Java, which is a problem
because I doubt they want to distribute it with Software Update.
The Finder sorting issues will never be fixed, as they haven't for
the whole lifetime of Mac OS X. Every GUI ever implemented
with a file manager sorted directories first, and Apple's way of
doing things isn't always right.
Apple must listen to customers or the recent flurry of adoption
will halt and might even rewing.
DO I hate Leopard? No. It's fine for my users, and I am smart
enough to make workarounds for most issues, but I still want
the source to fix them, it's their duty, I shelled money to keep
them innovating, but quality is even more of a concern.
remember, and in that case, directories are top of the sort order.
So I don't know what you refer to.
-- sparcdr said:
The Finder sorting issues will never be fixed, as they haven't for
the whole lifetime of Mac OS X. Every GUI ever implemented with
a file manager sorted directories first, and Apple's way of doing
things isn't always right.
pain I've had is reading really stupid articles like this one, but thats
what I expect from Cnet.
Apple hater, Molly Wood!
I've had zero issues as well... must have been a slow news day
but it is really annoying that my mac is less than 3 months old and
it would cost me $199 to upgrade. how about some consideration
for recent apple converts--like a discount for us poor shmucks
who didn't want to wait for this new os
The same goes with computers. Technology always changes. Apple did a HUGE favor to the iPhone people when they gave credit to early adopters. The OS has been hyped and scheduled for release this year and you probably knew about it. If you want the latest and greatest you should have waited or you should shell out $200. Your quote of, "...like a discount for us poor shmucks who didn't want to wait for this new os." Says it all.
Apple is in buisness to sell HARDWARE not software like Microsoft. The point of Leopard was to sell more MacBooks, iMacs, and Mac Pro's. $200 is just a bonus for their revenue.
You know how Apple charges $200 extra for black mac-book, HP should charge 500 just for their design of TX1000
I have a Black mac-book (thankfully I didn't buy it) and it looks like an old dell laptop... and I use Windows on it, because for some mysterious reason, I can't connect to my wireless network in Mac OS
I'm glade you did too. If only I hadn't spent so much money on my
over hyped macbook, I could be just as technically ignorant as
you.
Seriously I had some PC dolt tell me that one time. I mentioned viruses and malware, and he proudly announced he has two computers. One online, the other not. He then went on to bash the Mac. I still couldn't get past PC dolts need to buy TWO FREAKIN COMPUTERS!!!!!!
- Typical Cnet FUD
- by jeffgtr60 November 2, 2007 8:33 AM PDT
- I installed Leopard on a Powermac G5, Mac Mini G4, Intel Powerbook Pro and an Ibook G4. All through the upgrade process, without a single hitch.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
Showing 1 of 3 pages (83 Comments)Cnet doesn't do unbiased reviews thats for sure. It just slants everything towards it's advertisers. There were a few hiccups with Leopard but nothing like the vista nightmare.