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Mac OS X v10.2

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Mac OS X version 10.2 "Jaguar" was the third major release of Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system. It superseded Mac OS X v10.1 code name Puma and preceded Mac OS X v10.3 "Panther." The operating system was initially available on August 24, 2002 for a price of $129 American dollars, or at a price of $199 dollars for Apple's new 'family pack', which allowed five installations on separate computers in one household. The operating system was generally well received by Macintosh users as a large step forward in the areas of stability, general speed enhancements, and the lineup of both graphical and command line applications available; however, many critics still claimed that significant user interface speed issues existed and that the operating system was still immature and awkward to use.

Mac OS X 'Jaguar' was the first Mac OS X release to publicly use its code name in marketing and advertisements. Today Mac OS X products continue the tradition, and Apple officially refers to their operating systems by their code names.

System Requirements

Features

Marketing

Mac OS X 10.2 packaging
Enlarge
Mac OS X 10.2 packaging

Jaguar marked the first Mac OS X release which publicly used its code name as both a marketing ploy and as an actual official reference to the operating system. To that effect, Apple replaced their standard Mac OS X box with a new Jaguar-themed box.

Today, all Mac OS X releases are given a feline-related name upon announcement, and Mac OS X releases are now referred to by their code name, in addition to version numbers.

Criticisms

While most critics of the operating system agreed that Jaguar was a great step towards completion of the Mac OS X operating system, they criticized Apple for not spending enough time working on annoying user interface snags, as well as making the user interface user-friendly and 'well rounded.' Even with Quartz Extreme, critics claimed that user interface lag was still a significant problem in the operating system, and that the user interface was still not a completed piece of work. Many critics went as far as to say that the user interface was 'awkward' and when using Mac OS 9, they felt their system was significantly faster.

Version history

Mac OS X v10.2.7 (codenames Blackrider, Smeagol) was only available to the new Power Mac G5s and aluminum PowerBook G4s released before Mac OS X v10.3. Officially, it was never released to the general public.

Mac OS X v10.2.8 is the last version of Mac OS X supported on the "beige G3" desktop and minitower systems.

Also, the famous Happy Mac that had served Mac users for almost 18 years during a Macintosh's startup sequence was replaced with a large grey Apple logo with the introduction of Mac OS X 10.2.

References

External links

History of the Apple Macintosh Operating Systems
Mac OS>Classic Mac OS (History): System 6 · System 7 · Mac OS 8 · Mac OS 9
Mac OS X (History of Mac OS X>History): Public Beta · v10.0 · v10.1 · v10.2 · v10.3 · v10.4 · v10.5
Mac OS X Server: Rhapsody (OS)>Rhapsody · Mac OS X Server 1.0 · Mac OS X Server
Other OS projects: A/UX · Taligent · Copland · Darwin (operating system)>Darwin

 


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