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Snow Leopard has few evident changes but many subtle ones. It's a trimmed, optimized version of v10.5 (Leopard) which came before it — a full 7GB smaller after installation! Some minor features are indeed new, but the majority of the changes are under the hood. Expose now differentiates between open and minimized application windows Snow Leopard doesn’t have any of the usual hype around new features, because there are barely any that the user can see. All improvements are backstage, designed to make OS X faster, stronger, and less prone to bugs. That also explains its relatively low cost. Snow Leopard is now fully 64-bit. All key components of the OS, including the new QuickTime X, are 64-bit. While this doesn’t impact the end user that much, it is a statement of Apple’s foresight. Grand Central Dispatch is another feature that you won’t see but that will make applications work better with multi-core processors. The same goes for OpenCL, which allows apps to take advantage of a graphics processor to speed up tasks. System Requirements
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Tags: Mac , OS X , Snow Leopard , Apple
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