November 15, 2007

Apple issues 23 updates in two days; highlights of Tiger and Leopard updates

200711151902

Make sure your broadband bill is paid up, because Apple's got a crate full of fixes with your name on them.

In a couple of cases, these are the updates we've all been waiting for. I'm hoping that the iMac Graphics Firmware Update will get iMac users out of their work/save/reboot cycle. Such beautiful machines behaving so badly. I still wonder whether Apple or ATI did the brunt of the work on this fix.

The entire Pro Apps suite has gotten significant attention. One of the many qualities to appreciate about Final Cut Studio, Aperture and Logic is the frequency with which Apple tunes and enhances them. TV networks and movie studios deserve a bit of extra attention, no?

All Tiger and Leopard users have gotten major attention. 10.4.11 is the latest scheduled release of Tiger, and high points among its improvements include Safari 3.0, RAW image decoding for a range of new Olympus and Panasonic cameras, VMware Fusion stability fixes, the addressing of a bug affecting port mapping with shared Internet connections, 3rd-party WAN device compatibility, USB hard drive reliability, and security updates.

I'm all in for that USB hard drive update. I wonder if it would have kept my dead MacBook Pro eval unit alive. I just missed it.

OS X Server 10.4.11 has all this, along with some server essentials, like allowing users to belong to more than 16 groups, repairs to the FTP server to handle the LIST command properly, failover between Intel and PowerPC servers, LAN registration of OS X servers via Bonjour, proper handling of aliases on UFS and Xsan volumes, having the chmod command cause corresponding changes in ACL permissions, and fixes for memory panics in servers with 2 GB and 4 GB of RAM.

The OS X 10.5.1 update has some changes that really matter. It puts password-protected AirPort disks in the Finder's Shared sidebar and claims to fix Leopard's annoying tendency to forget wireless network passwords.

Have you used Back to My Mac? It's a simple tunnel to your home Mac from a remote system that works even when one machine or the other is behind a NAT router. The Back to My Mac fix shows remotely-accessible Macs in Finder's sidebar more reliably, and fixes glitches with D-Link NAT gateways. D-Link gear is priced right, but it tends to present challenges, doesn't it?

iCal and Mail have substantial fixes in the areas of the delivery of alarms via e-Mail, the invitation of meeting attendees through CalDAV, attachments inside HTML e-mail, SMTP connection failures in accounts created with Simple Setup, and a couple of significant fixes affecting .Mac users.

In security and firewall (which have been combined in Leopard), Apple has arranged to allow unsigned third-party applications through the firewall if they're whitelisted in either Application Firewall or Parental Controls. Apple has changed some confusing wording in the Firewall tab; instead of Block All, which sounds like your machine is cut off from the outside world, Apple has inserted the wording "Allow only essential services." Apple's idea of "essential" may differ from yours; dealing with that is your problem.

One potentially serious squashed nasty regards the risk of dropping data when moving files across partitions using Finder. Time Machine no longer shrieks at huge, single-partition MBR (master boot record) drives and NTFS volumes.

Tom Yager writes InfoWorld's Mobile Edge blog.
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