Mac OS X 10.3 Panther [OLD VERSION] | ![Mac OS X 10.3 Panther [OLD VERSION]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/416ACBDKFML._SL500_.jpg)
| From: Apple
Buy New: $249.99
New (1) Used (8) from $29.99
Rating: 76 reviews Sales Rank: 1671
Format: Cd-rom Platform: Macintosh Color: 1-user Media: CD-ROM Edition: Standard Operating System: Macintosh Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 3.8 x 3.2 x 0.9
MPN: 878212 Model: M9227LL/A UPC: 718908551080 EAN: 0718908551080 ASIN: B0000E6NK9
Release Date: October 25, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 6-10 business days
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| Features:
| • | Super-modern operating system combining the strength of UNIX with the elegance of Macintosh | | • | Over 150 new features and significant enhancements to its modern, UNIX-based foundation | | • | iChat AV for personal video conferencing in high-quality, full-screen video over the Internet | | • | Expose for instant access to any window; displays all open or current-application windows | | • | FileVault for keeping your valuable documents safe with powerful AES-128 bit encryption |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description MAC OS X PANTHER V10.3 RETAIL
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| Customer Reviews: Read 71 more reviews...
Not a major upgrade but a nice one October 29, 2003 NutMac (Mountain View, CA) 170 out of 174 found this review helpful
Mac OS X 10.3 Panther is not the substantial upgrade that 10.2 Jaguar (made "snappier" with Quartz Extreme) and 10.1 Puma (the first Mac OS X usable for the masses) represented. It does, however, add many welcome features and is particularly recommended for notebook (iBook and PowerBook G4) and PowerMac G5 users.It is difficult to list every new feature (Apple claims 150 new features). I will describe only the major ones (as well as my personal favorites). The most significant addition is Expose, which upon a key press or a mouse gesture, shrinks all running windows so you can see them all. Click on one of the windows, it zooms in to a normal size. It is very cool and very effective, possibly the most revolutionary window management technology since the dawn of windowing graphical user interface. Even more impressive, all the windows continue to update themselves even when they shrink, giving you the "control center" view of running applications. Expose also lets you hide all the windows (so you can see what's on the desktop) or hide all the windows but the active one. This is a huge addition, especially for those with lower resolution display. The next most significant addition is rewritten Finder. Although many may not appreciate metallic design, it has received a ton of new feature and much faster to boot (multi-threaded). The new Finder resembles iTunes: the right pane shows mounted drives and volumes as well as "favorite directories" that you can customize. Located on the upper right-hand corner is a search function that returns matched files in real-time. Another welcome feature is color labels. You can organize files by marking them with one of many color labels (e.g., red for work stuff, blue for family stuff). And you can create zip files directly from Finder. At this point, most people will probably list Fast User Switching as the next most significant feature. Since my PowerBook is used by only me, I don't find this feature personally compelling. I've tried it and it works well. If you have multiple users, the menu bar will list your name towards the end. Clicking will list users you can switch to. Select one and after the password authentication, the entire screen rotates in 3D, switching to the new user's desktop. Very snazzy. Those with very long name (e.g., Arnold Schwartznegger), may not welcome his/her name occupying precious menu bar space, however. For me, 3rd most compelling addition is upgraded Mail. It is significantly faster than before. Significantly! And it adds several welcome additions, such as threaded view of messages, enhanced anti-spam features, enhanced HTML email rendering (thanks to Safari), and enhanced integration with the Address Book (which can now print labels, by the way). One disappointment is FileVault. While great in concept (it automatically encrypts files upon logout and automatically decrypts upon login), it is not very stable. Many users have reported preferences getting corrupted. Significant changes are summarized as follows. Pros: - Expose is one the most revolutionary windows management technologies to date - Faster faster faster -- Preview (with support for latest Acrobat format), Help, Mail, Finder - Performance enhancements for G5 processor - Significantly improved Finder and Mail - Cool Fast User Switching - Improved anti-aliasing for LCD displays (and you can enable it all the way down to 4 point fonts) - System Preferences better organized - Improved, more professional looking Aqua interface - Significantly improved DVD Player user interface with new bookmark feature - TextPad supports Word format - Emphasis on security with many security fixes, secure empty trash can, and FileVault Cons: - Expensive considering Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar is only about a year old - FileVault has many stability issues (do not use it until Apple offers a fix!) - iChat AV works with only .Mac and AOL (please open it to support MSN and Yahoo!) - Improved anti aliasing does not apply to older QuickDraw applications (e.g., Microsoft Office v.X) - Dock gets none of the much needed enhancements - DVD Player still lacks support for interactive DVD-ROM contents - You cannot add/remove features after installing Mac OS X Panther - Keyboard support is still limited (i.e., cannot directly select the menu item) - Not high DPI displays friendly (Dots/pixels Per Inch), such as 12.1" iBook and PowerBook -- smaller fonts will be difficult to read still - Apple menu is still not customizable - Safari gets only a minor update (still incompatible with many web sites)
Panther Delivers November 9, 2003 David Kudler 82 out of 84 found this review helpful
Oops! Hit save twice without meaning to, and I can't seem to edit out the rest of this review. Sorry!I ordered this product because I was suffering some difficulties with an earlier version of OS X (10.2.8), and because this one promised some nice improvements and a speed jump.
Goodness.
Installation was a snap. Several online news sources strongly recommended running disk and permissions repair from the Disk Utility; that took about a half-hour for both--I have a 40GB drive. Then I ran the installer, clicked maybe four buttons, and another twenty minutes later I was running 10.3. Not only does it look cool and contain some fabulous interface improvements--Expose alone is one of those OS doodads you wonder how you ever got along without, and I can finally run the HP driver for my home-networked DeskJet--but the speed and responsiveness of my computer has bumped--this is a subjective measure, but I think a good one--probably 15-25%.
It's also quite stable--not that earlier versions of OS X weren't, but this one has run like a dream. Running on my PowerBook G3 (Pismo/FireWire/2000 model) for the past week and a half, no bombs (of course--in a year and a half of running X, I've had two kernel panics), few application crashes (actually, I'm not sure I can remember any), and only one glitch: if the "Wake for system administrator" box was checked in the Energy Saver "options" tab, my computer would occasionally wake from sleep, but the monitor would be irrevocably black. Fortunately, I don't need to have a SysOp diddle with my system--if I did, I'd probably drop the review a star.
The new 'quick user change' option is a godsend, since my kids occasionally use my computer, and I like to be able to leave my email, etc, on while theire doing their thing. It's incredibly smooth--the only drawback being that you can't (apparently) have the same application opened by two different users at the same time. That includes the Classic environment. In order to switch between my daughters' accounts, I needed actually to log out, since both of them primarilly use OS 9 edutainment apps. Ah well. That's the one thing I'd love the Apple geniuses to rethink for 10.4!
The wonderful thing is that this OS actually breathes new life into my 3 1/2 year old laptop--think of the last time an operating system upgrade didn't actually SLOW DOWN your vintage computer. The smoothness and the features--especially the HP IP printing driver--make it possible for me now actually to consider jettisoning Classic. I think that's a strong enough endorsement of how terrific this version of OS X is. If you've been putting off upgrading from OS 9 till the system got a bit more mature, your patience has been rewarded; this is a beatiful, fully-grown operating system.
Another quantum leap. October 11, 2003 Maine Writer (Maine, USA) 78 out of 79 found this review helpful
I've had the pleasure to use Panther over the summer, including the version that is now being released by Apple. There are several things you ought to know. (1) Speed. Every Mac I installed it on, from an iMac 500 DV to a G5 1.8 gHz felt easily twice as fast. It really is like getting a brand new computer. (2) RAM. This beast needs plenty of RAM; 512 MB at the least. (3) Expose. The new feature for dealing with multiple open windows and programs is priceless. Alone worth the expense of this software, I couldn't live without it.This is the best operating system on the market, bar none.
A great deal ... if you haven't done this in a while January 18, 2004 Eric J. Lyman (Roma, Lazio Italy) 32 out of 33 found this review helpful
I upgraded my G4 Powerbook to Panther about two weeks ago and so far everything's gone off without a hitch. But while this system continues the rock-solid stability I was accustomed to and there are dozens of improvements here as detailed by my fellow reviewers and in The Missing Manual (which I loved), I wonder if this update is a good value for money for those who were already using OS10.2 as I was.It is a clear (even if incremental) improvement from OS 10.2, and at least one friend who is a Mac user told me that an upgrade to OS 10.3 from OS 10.2 eliminated what had been an annoying software conflict. But I think that anyone who is comfortable with OS 10.2 might be better off sticking with what they have and waiting for OS 10.4 or 10.5 before making the leap. But for users still using OS10.1 or something older, I think this would be a great investment, adding stability (when I used it OS 10.1's stability was undermined by a lot of bugs that were worked out in the following generations), slick new features like Espose, and an interface that's easy on the eyes and more intuitive than previous versions.
Well Well Worth It! October 25, 2003 29 out of 34 found this review helpful
Man Oh Man what a super upgrade! Mac OS 10.2 was sweet but 10.3 is friggin mind blowing! I am running it on a iMac 500MHz G3 with 1.2 GB of ram and I swear this computer is twice as fast now! Everything in this operating system is faster, even my boardband internet connection with Safari is faster! Mail, faster! iTunes, faster. iPhoto, faster! MS Office, faster! Sherlock, faster! Even my shareware programs move faster. The interface itself is faster, moving files, moving thru disk etc, it is all faster, much faster! The changes to the OS are great, the new finder, Expose, the new Mail all of it. I waited in line for an hour to buy it the night it went on sale at the Houston Apple Store, and it's worth not only the wait but the money. This baby must scream on a newer Mac. At first I was concerned my iMac would bogg down with this new OS but my little 500MHz G3 is smokin now, kinda sucks cause now I have even less of a reason to buy a new Mac.......My advice buy this baby and again have the best computer OS in the world! Long live the Panther!
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