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Apple's Snow Leopard: Bigger Than The iPhone 3GS?


Posted by Mitch Wagner, Jun 29, 2009 02:31 PM

While all the Apple buzz is about the iPhone 3GS, Snow Leopard is looking like much more important announcement for Apple. Both were announced at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference a few weeks ago, they're both significant steps forward for existing products. While the 3GS is sexier, Snow Leopard has under-the-hood improvements in the operating system that will help carry Apple into the future.


We talked about Snow Leopard vs. 3GS at a roundtable discussion I hosted a couple of weeks back in Second Life. The discussion included blogger Gina Trapani, founding editor of Lifehacker, who now blogs at Smarterware; Michael T. Rose of one of my favorite Apple blogs, The Unofficial Apple Weblog; and ArminasX Saiman, who runs a shop in Second Life and blogs at Second Effects.

Listen to the audio of our conversation: Springtime for Apple. Or watch it as a video:

I was a bit incredulous at first at the idea that Snow Leopard might be bigger than the iPhone 3GS. Snow Leopard is just a dot-release update to the desktop operating system, while the 3GS is ... is ... well, it's a new iPhone, which means it's completely made of awesome! However, discussing it with the other guests and thinking about it afterwards, I'm sold. While Snow Leopard has only a few user-facing features, it's leaner, faster, with improved graphics performance, and optimized for multicore processors. Moreover, it only runs on Intel Macs; Apple is leaving its Power PC legacy behind. And the price is important: When it ships in September, Snow Leopard will be a $29 upgrade, compared with $129 for other operating system upgrades this decade.

We talked about a wide range of Apple-related subjects, including speculation whether the spinning-beachball spins the other way in Australia and New Zealand.

Note: The roundtable was part of Copper Robot, an interview program I do in my spare time, unaffiliated with InformationWeek.

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