Mac OS X Lion sets the bar for cheaper software

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No optical discs in web launch of multitouch-friendly OS.

Apple has introduced the latest iteration of its Mac OS X software, with more than 250 new features and a cheap price tag.

Mac OS X Lion sets the bar for cheaper software

Apple said the software would be available for just AUD$31.99 inc GST. Past versions of Apple's operating system have cost at least three times that amount.

The OS will not be available to consumers until July 2011, but a developer preview has been made available today.

Amongst the numerous additions to the OS was multitouch gestures, showcased during Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference in San Francisco today.

Apple's Phil Schiller showed how full screen apps, such as Safari, could work with multi-touch, swiping to revert to the desktop screen, and then swiping again to bring the app back.

“We now build multi-touch trackpads in every notebook, and we have a desktop tool. So we build it in to OS X now,” Schiller said.

Another addition is the Mission Control panel, which gives users a "birds eye view" of everything they’re running.

From Mission Control, users can zoom into each app they are running, selecting whichever they want from different 'Spaces' which are a way of grouping apps and other windows together. Any open app can be dragged into a Space, and these Spaces can be destroyed or created instantaneously.

A ‘Launchpad’ has also been added, showing up all apps through a simple pinching motion. Within this, users can rearrange icons and create folders, just like in iOS.

A ‘Resume’ feature means that with each app, users are returned to how they left their apps, even after shutting down the entire computer.

In a similar vein, auto-save ensures no documents are lost when users forget to save. It effectively means users no longer have to click save whatsoever.

"From the beginning of using computers, we've had to remember one thing: save, save, save," Schiller said during the keynote.

“The one time you forget, something goes wrong. Why should you have to remember? That's what Lion does. Lion automatically saves in the background without you having to do anything.”

AirDrop, meanwhile, attempts to solve the problem of sharing data via USBs by offering a P2P network to transfer files. It appears as a new option within Finder, allowing users to see what others are using AirDrop for in real time.

Users just need to drag the document to anothers' picture, before being asked if they want to do so. Then they just need to confirm. For added security, the data itself is encrypted.

Another update with Lion is Mail, which now comes with search suggestions. Mail can now recognise whether a search term is a person or a subject to improve results.

Conversation View within Mail now means users can interact with others via a thread - a feature compatible with other email clients.

Face-tracking technology within Mac OS X Lion means users running Photobooth or other apps using a web camera will get better shots.

Apple promised there was plenty more to sell about the OS, with 3,000 new APIs, but could not go into detail, claiming there were simply too many.

Lion comes available on the Mac App Store only and will not come on an optical disc, which Apple described as the "easiest upgrade ever".

This article originally appeared at itpro.co.uk

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