fellskrazykayaker
Distinguished
[citation][nom]beayn[/nom]I would hope they add new features since OSX has been out since 2002 and they have not had a major new OS release since then. Microsoft completely revamped their OS in that time and released Vista in 2007 and Win7 in 2009. If your OS life cycle is going to be 10+ years, you better add new features in the service packs to make it seem fresh or people will get bored and think you aren't "innovating" enough (a big Apple buzzword).Someone also stated that Apple never charges for its service packs, but I'm pretty sure I saw Snow Leopard on for $30 USD. Since it's still OSX, it's just like a service pack.[/citation]
Which XP features from service packs did you like think added lots of functionality? Windows Movie Maker from SP2?
Minor point releases contain security fixes. Are you saying that the major point releases (big cats) are not major OS releases? I would consider major interface changes, kernel changes, and added features to be new OS releases. If that's not a major OS release what is?
I mean Windows 7 kept Vista's kernel. Is Windows 7 not a major OS release? How would you define a major OS release? I love Windows 7 and I'm running it on four of my machines at home but I don't find it dramatically different than Windows Vista.
Which XP features from service packs did you like think added lots of functionality? Windows Movie Maker from SP2?
Minor point releases contain security fixes. Are you saying that the major point releases (big cats) are not major OS releases? I would consider major interface changes, kernel changes, and added features to be new OS releases. If that's not a major OS release what is?
I mean Windows 7 kept Vista's kernel. Is Windows 7 not a major OS release? How would you define a major OS release? I love Windows 7 and I'm running it on four of my machines at home but I don't find it dramatically different than Windows Vista.