appleinsider.com — Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard has two audiences: those who already own a Mac and are interested in upgrading their experience, and new buyers investigating a Mac purchase. This review series is designed primarily toward Mac users looking to upgrade but includes notes of interest to new Mac buyers as well. This segment provides a 2-page introduction
Oct 26, 2007 View in Crawl 4
superkendallOct 26, 2007
Vista with UAC turned off is a security nightmare though. It just keeps up the status quo with security issues...
ellipsysOct 27, 2007
All right, so it seems like its a nice advancement of the OS. I'm thinking of buying a MacBook Pro, but until a new revision (and hopefully a totally new design etc..) arrives, I think I'm going to keep it on hold. Leopard will be there waiting when I'm ready to buy. I just wish they'd bring out a new MBP chassis design.
supersunnyOct 27, 2007
Leopard is the s**t. i've never used anything so damn cool and awesome before. It made me feel like Vista's UI was dungheap and don't even bring in KDE4...
Closed AccountOct 27, 2007
Leopard's just been released, and there can't be a single Digg discussion without 75% of the comments being posted by idiots who either need to reassure themselves that Windows is OK, or or how Windows sucks, or are just pathological Apple haters.And you bring up KDE? Go the f**k away.
Closed AccountOct 27, 2007
My upgrade-install went flawlessly on my MacBook. The hardest part was waiting for Spotlight to re-index.
Closed AccountOct 27, 2007
<a class="user" href="http://www.microsoft.com/msft/FAQ/dividend.mspx">http://www.microsoft.com/msft/FAQ/dividend.mspx</a>Lets see how that 10-20% ROI of yours works out with the divided. The dividend is currently 11 Cents per share. One share costs for the sake of argument, $30. The dividend is paid quarterly, so in a year you'll earn 44 cents on your $30. (0.44/30)*100=1.46% Annual ROI.That is again, 1.46% ROI. Not 10-20%There was a ONE TIME dividend of $3/share. That would get you 10%. ONCE.With the normal dividends you could expect to earn something on the order of 20% ROI OVER 7 YEARS, NOT EVERY YEAR FOR 7 YEARS.BUT THEY STARTED PAYING DIVIDENDS IN 2004... 3 years ago. So you're completely f**ked up.