Apple released the fifth version for Mac OS X Tiger 10.4. A number of bugs are fixed and upgrade is recommended for all PPC, x86 and Server OSX users. This update focuses on iChat’s video conferencing, Safari’s rendering engine, usability of Dashboard widgets, iDisk syncing, and much more. It’s available as a stand-alone download (delta | combo), and through Software Update.
.. as osx 10.4.4 was hacked by Maxxus.
I bet a loud yell echoed through his neighborhood today.
Edited 2006-02-14 22:12
LOL !
It is one of of the smallest update I’ve ever seen for a system update : 7 mb !
I was running 10.4.4 before
It probably wouldn’t be if you had an Intel Mac. Look at the size of the Intel upgrade – almost 100 MB. I think this update was released mostly to fix the issues discovered on Intel Macs…and the list of changes only proves it.
Indeed. But if you look at 10.4.5 combo (at least for ppc), it is around 125 Mb.
Tiger for ppc is alright, Tiger for x86 is going the same way, but with a little more time for it
As a non-Mac user … did each of these releases (.1, .2, .3, .4, .5) cost money for owners of Mac OS X?
Or, are they free updates?
Just curious. (i couldn’t tell from the link)
Edited 2006-02-14 22:09
10.x.0 you pay for.
10.x.x you do not.
I guess these minor updates are for free as I could download them though I don’t use OSX products.
The major point releases of Mac OS X. ( 10.1, 10.2, 10.3, etc. ) you pay for. The minor ones. ( 10.4.1, 10.4.2, etc.) you don’t. The first are best comparable to completely new OS versions and tend to have signifigant changes implemented. The later are point upgrades, better compared to service pack updates. They tend to fix/improve a variety of things, but for the most part they’re maintainence releases.
Did anyone else experience an odd bug trying to log in after installing this? I rebooted, and typed in my password, and it wouldn’t let me in. I am pretty sure that it wasn’t just me mistyping. I clicked the restart button, and then everything worked fine after the second reboot…
I didn’t have a problem with that, but I did have to manually turn off power on the restart. I got to the blue screen with the spinning lines and after about 5 minutes I manually shut it down. The reboot did take a lot longer than normal, also, even longer than after the previous updates.
No problems here… yet.
there is been reports that this new update has speeded things up. It seems every update apple do they speed the system up. Apparantly when you first lauch an app is is normal speed but once you shut down and re-launch it is far more snappier almost like they have improved the cache. My PB is working a lot faster.
actually 10.1 was a free upgrade to the adventurous 10.0 owners. 10.2 should’ve been as well as it was the first relatively speedy OSX release, and is pretty much the oldest OSX release still supported.
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.X etc. all will remain pay for “upgrades” (usually have new features, although the features may not really be features to some, and usually add support for newer hardware configurations, e.g. Quartz extreme for 16(or was it 32)M plus 3D cards(also required a particular acceleration feature, which I forget offhand so not all 32M+ cards can run Quartz extreme…) etc.)
10.X.1-Y are “minor” point upgrades which usually do not include new “features”, but only bugfixes and security updates. Oh yes, support for new model macs USUALLY comes in the point releases as well.