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Windows 7 vs. Mac OS X Snow Leopard
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As I write these words, I'm installing yet another near-final Windows 7 build on several machines. And I'm simultaneously installing the latest pre-release Snow Leopard build on my mid-2008 MacBook. (I've purchased more Apple hardware and software than most Mac fanatics.) But before I get my hands on either build and dive in, let me explain where I'm coming from, where my head is at, circa mid-June 2009.
Obviously, I've spent a lot more time in Windows than I have on the Mac, and that experience gap widens yet again when you look at Windows 7 and Snow Leopard specifically. With Windows 7, I've used virtually every single prerelease build that's come down the pike. With Snow Leopard, I've only installed a handful of prerelease builds, and only in the past five months or so. But my impressions of each are easily stated, and I think of these releases within the perspective of their predecessors.
On the Windows side, Windows Vista (see my review) was a major release of Windows, and a huge technological change from Windows XP. By comparison, Windows 7 is a fine-tuning of Windows Vista, a chance for Microsoft to delve into every single nook and cranny of the system, internally and externally, improving everything in ways large and small. The result is a wonderful update, but one that will be more dramatic to XP users than Vista users.
Mac OS X Leopard (see my review) was the latest in a long list of evolutionary OS X upgrades that date back to the original OS X release in 2001. That first Mac OS X version was, as you'd expect, a major release. But Apple's strategy has been to refine, refine, refine, and while they've marketed and sold each subsequent update as if it were a major release, none of them have been, not really. Snow Leopard continues this trend, but in even more explicit form, with Apple finally admitting with this release, for the first time, that it's just fine-tuning what came before. But that's just fine. Like Windows, Mac OS X is a mature operating system, and while my description of the previous several updates as minor release may rankle Apple fanatics, we can at least all agree that Mac OS X, today, is in good shape. Snow Leopard will be the best version yet, but it doesn't change the Mac OS X user experience much at all.
Fundamentally, I feel that both Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are minor, evolutionary updates, technologically. Windows 7 is a major update from a user experience perspective, while Snow Leopard is not. Mac purists may argue that OS X didn't need a major user experience update, but I don't agree with that, and feel that OS X--from the end user's perspective--has been pretty stagnant for a while. But it's not all wine and cheese on the Windows side of the fence. Windows changes a lot between versions, but it sometimes feels like Microsoft is just experimenting to see what works. In fact, there's some Mac envy in Windows 7 I absolutely don't agree with, including the new OS X Dock-like taskbar. We'll get to that.
So that's where I'm at now, before parsing through all of the major functional aspects of each system. I may just change my mind on all of this. Maybe you will as well. You never know.
Continue to Part 2: Pricing...
--Paul Thurrott
June 9-15, 2009

Part 1: Oh, It's On!
Part 2: Pricing
More soon...
Windows 7




Mac OS X Snow Leopard




Windows Vista w/ Service Pack 1





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