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Apple polishes up OS X Tiger
Apple has released a 37 Mb patch
for its recently launched OS X 10.4 operating system.
Apple applied its marketing filter to the update in way that raises the bar
on avoiding calling things by their name.
On its website the company claims that it "again" has released the
most advanced operating system. Given the number of wrinkles that required
ironing out "at last" would have been be more accurate. It sounds
Orwellian at least. All of Apple's operating systems are advanced, some are
just more advanced than others?
In continuing with its euphemistic language, Apple explains on its website
that the patch fixes problems in a slew of applications such as Safar and iDVD
that could make them "unexpectedly quit" (in real world language:
crash).
The patch by the way isn't a patch but an "update".
Apple's website mentions a total of 35 flaws... excuse me: issues, in its
operating system that are fixed in this update.
And it even gets users additional Address Book, Flight Tracker, Phone Book
and World Clock widgets.
Kudos for Apple for fixing the issues in OS X 10.4 Tiger issues so quickly.
But if it took only so little time, why couldn't the company have shipped
its product without the flaws to begin with? Any beta testing process should
include testing for certified graphics cards, for example. Judging by the fact
that the vendor felt obligated to distribute update drivers for cards, this
part of hardware testing wasn't done properly.
But then no software is released without any flaws. Not even Apple's.
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