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Mac OS X Leopard Family Pack (5-User) (Mac OS X)
Mac OS X Leopard Family Pack (5-User) (Mac OS X)
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From: Apple
Category: Software

List Price: £129.00
Buy New: £107.48
You Save: £21.52 (17%)
Buy New/Used from £84.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(3 reviews)
Sales Rank: 284

Format: Dvd-rom
Language: English (Original Language)
Platforms: Mac Os X Intel, Mac Os X
Media: DVD-ROM
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 19.7 x 19.7 x 19.7

MPN: MB577Z/A
Model: MB577Z/A
UPC: 885909216635
EAN: 0885909168040
ASIN: B000BR0NPO

Release Date: October 31, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Accessories:

  • iWork '08 Family Pack

Similar Items:

  • iLife '08 Family Pack
  • iWork '08 Family Pack
  • Office 2008 for Mac, Home and Student Edition (Mac)
  • Mac OS X Leopard: The Missing Manual
  • iWork '08

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard is packed with over 300 features, installs easily, and works with the software and accessories you already have. Choose a single-user license for home or office. Or if you have more than one Mac at home, choose the five-user Family Pack.Main Features:Apple Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard - Family PackDesktop - a neat place to work: Leopard brings a stunning look to the desktop, and stacks provides a great new way to keep it cleanFinder - give your files the rock star treatment: See your files r...

Product Description



Create Stacks from anything to access quickly in one place.




Enjoy a gorgeous new look and organise your files in Stacks.

Desktop. A neat place to work.
From the menu bar to the stunning new Dock, the Leopard desktop isn't just about design. It's about enjoying the time you spend on your computer and getting more out of it.

An eye-opening experience.
Start from the top. The menu bar hovers transparently above your workspace, letting the desktop image--perhaps a favourite from your iPhoto library--take center stage. Dock icons rest on a reflective floor with a bright active application signal. And the look of Leopard extends to all applications: Every window has a consistent design theme, and active applications are even more distinct, casting deeper shadows.

Stacked in your favor.
Take a look at your desktop. Is it cluttered with files you downloaded or saved there (somewhat less than) temporarily? You're not alone. Everybody does it. Time to clean house with Stacks--a brand-new feature in Leopard. Create Stacks from anything you want to access quickly from one place: a handful of documents, a group of applications, an entire folder. Files you download in Safari or save from an email are automatically directed to a Stack in the Dock, and when the download is complete, the Stack signals that a new item has arrived. When you want to see the files in a Stack, all you have to do is click--Stacks spring open from the Dock in an elegant arc for a few items, or in an at-a-glance grid for more.



Browse your files like you browse your music with Cover Flow.

Finder. Give your files the rock star treatment.
Imagine if browsing the files on your Mac was as easy as browsing music in iTunes. That's the idea behind the new Finder in Leopard. Now you can access everything on your system from an iTunes-style sidebar and flip through your files using Cover Flow.


Grouped sidebar items help you find what you need fast.

The sidebar steps up.
Leopard brings new power to your old friend, the sidebar. Now items are grouped into categories: places, devices, shared computers, and searches--just like the Source list in iTunes. So with a single click, you're on your way to finding what you need.

See what you seek.
Bring your files to life with Cover Flow in the Finder. Just as you use Cover Flow to flip through album art in iTunes, now you can use it to flip through your files. Cover Flow displays each file as a large preview of its first page. And you can page through multipage documents or play movies.

Search party.
Stop looking and start finding with Cover Flow and Spotlight. Click a prebuilt search like "yesterday" or "all images" in the sidebar and Cover Flow displays your search results in the perfect at-a-glance format. Leopard comes with a number of helpful prebuilt searches, but it's easy to create your own customised searches as well.

Closer connections.
With shared computers automatically displayed in the sidebar, it's far easier to find or access files on any computer in your house, whether Mac or PC. All it takes is a click. But here's where things get really interesting. By clicking on a connected Mac, you can see and control that computer (if authorised, of course) as if you were sitting in front of it. You can even search all the computers in the house to find what you're looking for.

And now, back to my Mac.
Ever need something on your Mac when you were thousands of miles from home? With Back to My Mac and a .Mac account, you can connect to any of your Macs at home from any Mac on the Internet. Your home computers will appear in the shared section of the sidebar just as they do when you're in the living room.


Improved spotlight searches.

Look deeper.
From the Finder or the menu bar, Spotlight in Leopard lets you search for more specific sets of things. Use Boolean logic to narrow search results by entering "AND," "OR," or "NOT" into a search request. You can also search for exact phrases (using quotation marks), dates, ranges (using greater than [>] and less than [<] symbols), absolute dates, and simple calculations.


View, play, and read files without even opening them.

Quick Look. Look before you launch.
Using Quick Look in Leopard, you can view the contents of a file without even opening it. Flip through multiple-page documents. Watch full-screen video. See entire Keynote presentations. With a single click.

Opening files is so 2006.
So you're flipping through files in the Finder. But you're looking for something specific and you don't have time to open lots of files to find it. Enter Quick Look. It gives you a sneak peek of entire files--even multiple-page documents and video--without opening them.

See everything.
Quick Look works with nearly every file on your system, including images, text files, PDFs, movies, Keynote presentations, and Microsoft Word and Excel files. Click the Quick Look icon or tap the Space bar to see a file in Quick Look. Then click the arrow icon to see the same file full screen--even video as it plays.

Time Machine. A giant leap backward.
More than a mere backup, Time Machine makes an up-to-date copy of everything on your Mac--digital photos, music, movies, TV shows, and documents--so you can go back in time to recover anything.

Set it, then forget it.
You can start using Time Machine in seconds. The first time you attach an external drive to your Mac, Time Machine asks if you'd like to use that drive as your backup. Say yes and Time Machine takes care of everything else. Automatically. In the background. You'll never have to worry about backing up again.

Back up everything.
Time Machine keeps an up-to-date copy of everything on your Mac. That includes system files, applications, accounts, preferences, music, photos, movies, and documents. But what makes Time Machine different from other backup applications is that it not only keeps a spare copy of every file, it remembers how your system looked on any given day--so you can revisit your Mac as it appeared in the past.



Go back in time to restore any file on your system.

Go back in time.
Enter the Time Machine browser in search of your long-lost files and you see exactly how your computer looked on the dates you're browsing. Select a specific date, let Time Machine find your most recent changes, or do a Spotlight search to find exactly what you're looking for. Once you do, click Restore and Time Machine brings it back to the present. Time Machine restores individual files, complete folders, or your entire computer--putting everything back the way it was and where it should be.

Effortless meets wireless.
With a hard disk connected to your AirPort Extreme Base Station, AirPort all the Macs in your house can use Time Machine to back up wirelessly. Simply select your AirPort Disk as the backup disk for each computer and the whole family can enjoy the benefits of Time Machine.

Preferential treatment.
Customize Time Machine by modifying the following behaviors in System Preferences:

  • Backup disk. Change the drive or volume you're backing up to. Or back up to a Mac OS X Server computer.
  • Do not back up. By default, Time Machine backs up your entire system. But you can also select items you'd rather not back up.
  • Encrypt backup data. Turn on encryption to store your backup securely.
  • Backup storage time limits. Manage older backups so your backup drive doesn't fill up.


Drag windows to different workspaces and unclutter your Mac.

Spaces. Room for everything.
You do a lot on your Mac. So what happens when projects pile up? Easy. Use Spaces to group your windows and banish clutter completely. Leopard gives you a Space for everything and puts everything in its Space.

Rearrange the rooms.
Create a Space for work. Create a Space for play. organise each Space the way you want it just by dragging in windows. Keep all your work projects in one Space and that fun flick you made in iMovie in another. Create a communication Space for iChat and Mail. You can even rearrange your Spaces with drag-and-drop ease--shift a Space and every window in it comes along for the ride.

Make yourself at home.
Moving from Space to Space is easy. Get a bird's-eye view and select the Space you want or toggle between Spaces using the arrow keys. Even the Dock is down with Spaces: When you click a Dock icon, Leopard whisks you to the Space (or Spaces) where you have that application open.

Pick your patterns.
Configure your Spaces by visiting the Expose Spaces pane in System Preferences. Add rows and columns until you have all the real estate you need. Arrange your Spaces as you see fit, then choose the function keys you want to control them. You can also assign applications to specific Spaces, so you'll always know where, say, Safari or Keynote is.



Email personalised stationery, write to-dos, and take notes.

Mail. Think outside the inbox.
Leopard transforms email into personalised stationery. Notes you can access anywhere. To-dos that change as your errands do. For everything you do with email--and some things you haven't thought of yet--there's Mail.

Sincerely yours.
Mail for Leopard features more than 30 professionally designed stationery templates that make a virtual keepsake out of every email you send. From invitations to birthday greetings, stationery templates feature coordinated layouts, fonts, colors, and drag-and-drop photo placement--everything to help you get your point across. You can even create personalised templates. And messages created using stationery in Mail use standard HTML that can be read by every popular email program on the market--for both Mac and PC.



Notes and tasks help you stay organised.

Noteworthy indeed.
Ever email yourself a reminder that gets lost in your inbox? Mail lets you write handy notes you can access from anywhere. Brainstorm ideas, jot down meeting notes, scribble a phone number--notes can include graphics, colored text, and attachments. Group notes into folders or create Smart Mailboxes that group them for you. Since your notes folder acts like an email mailbox, you can retrieve notes from any Mac or PC.

Much ado about to-dos.
Forget manually entering a new item to your to-do list every time an email hits your inbox. Simply highlight text in an email, then click the To-do icon to create a to-do from a message. Include a due date, set an alarm, or assign priorities. Every to-do you create includes a link to the original email or note, and to-dos automatically appear in iCal, complete with any edits or additions you make. And since to-dos are stored with your email, you can access them from Mail on any Mac.

Spotlight on Mail.
With smarter relevance ranking in Spotlight, you'll find the right email at the top of the search results list. And everything you create in Leopard Mail--to-dos, notes, and, of course, email messages--appears in a Spotlight search of your system.

Stop the presses.
Subscribe to an RSS feed in Mail and you'll know the moment an article or blog post hits the wire. Even better, you can choose to have new articles emailed to you. Sorting your news is easy, too. Use Smart Mailboxes to organise incoming news articles according to search terms that pique your interest. Mail shares its unread RSS feed count with Safari, so your reading list always stays in sync.

Data, detected.
Say you get an email invitation to dinner. What if Mail recognised the address of the restaurant and let you map directions on the web? Or let you click once to add the date to your iCal calendar? With Leopard, it does. Mail even recognises combinations of data in phrases like "lunch tomorrow at 12 p.m. at 701 Baltic Ave, San Francisco, CA," making it easy to make plans.

Setup made simple.
Now you can set up a new Mail account in one easy step. Just enter your current email address and password and let Mail do the rest. Mail works with the most popular email providers to automatically configure all those cryptic server settings for you.



Add effects to video chats and make remote presentations.

iChat. Not being there is half the fun.
Filled with fun new features, iChat turns any video chat into an event. Video backdrops, Photo Booth effects, photo slideshows, Keynote presentations, even movies on your Mac--you can share it all using iChat.



Transform your video chats using Photo booth effects.


Share your files with friends using iChat Theater.

Chat for effect.
Transform your video chats using new Photo Booth effects. Choose an effect and your image changes instantly--iChat detects your background and adds the effect only to your image. And the reverse is true for iChat backdrops: Drag an Apple-designed backdrop or your own photo or video into the video preview window to create an effect that will fool your buddies into thinking you're chatting from your living room, the beach, or the moon.

Show off (without showing up).
Why wait for a darkened room and a projector to present vacation photos or Keynote slides? Now you can do it all remotely, right in iChat. Put on an entire photo slideshow, click through a Keynote presentation, or play a movie--in full screen, accompanied by a video feed of you hosting--while your buddy looks on. In fact, you can show any file on your system that works with Quick Look.

Chatting for the record.
Now you can save your audio and video chats for posterity with iChat recording. Before recording starts, iChat notifies your buddies and asks for their permission to record. When you're done chatting, iChat stores your audio chats as AAC files and video chats as MPEG-4 files so you can play them in iTunes or QuickTime. Share them with colleagues, friends, and family or sync them to your iPod and play on the go.

Crystal-clear audio.
iChat uses the AAC-LD audio codec to deliver the clearest possible sound during audio chats. A wideband codec that samples a full range of vocal frequencies, AAC-LD sounds great with any voice.

Still the best for text.
Sure, iChat has a lot to offer for video and audio chats, but text messaging also gets a boost in Leopard, thanks to these additions:

  • Tabbed chats
  • Multiple logins
  • Invisibility
  • Animated buddy icons
  • SMS forwarding
  • Custom buddy list order
  • File transfer manager
  • Space-efficient views

AIM to please.
iChat works with AIM. You and your buddies can be either AIM or .Mac users. Text, audio, and video chat whether your buddies use a Mac or PC. Sign in with your AIM account and all your buddies appear in your iChat buddy list.

iCal. Your schedule is clear.
Leopard introduces a new look to iCal, along with an easier-to-use interface that makes scheduling and rescheduling a breeze. Add new group calendaring features, and iCal works better for business or pleasure.
Photo Booth. Say cheese.
Come on. You know you want to. Your built-in iSight or USB camera just begs to take your snapshot. Open Photo Booth--now built into Leopard--and have a little fun.
Dashboard. Where there's a will, there's a widget.
Leopard lets you create your very own Dashboard widget from any website. And new .Mac syncing keeps all of your widgets on all of your Macs.
Front Row. Put on a show.
Looking for a great way to enjoy all the cool stuff on your Mac? Front Row in Leopard works like Apple TV to play digital music, movies, TV shows, and photos on your Mac using the ultra-simple Apple Remote.
Safari. Still the world's best web browser.
Now your favourite web browser is also the fastest on the planet. With page load speeds to rival every other major browser, Safari for Leopard also introduces a few new features to the mix.
DVD Player. Very entertaining.
DVD Player in Leopard probably boasts more features than the DVD player in your home entertainment system. And you don't have to leave your Mac to enjoy it.
Parental Controls
Give your kids a safer, happier Mac experience.
Accessibility. More user friendly.
Leopard offers new features destined to make it the most accessible Mac OS yet. New voice technology in VoiceOver, along with Braille support, Breakthrough Browsing, and extended keyboard capability, give users with visual disabilities more control over the Mac than ever.
Boot Camp. Run Windows on your Mac.
Leopard is the world's most advanced operating system. So advanced, it even lets you run Windows if there's a PC application you need to use. Just get a copy of Windows and start up Boot Camp, now included with Leopard. Setup is simple and straightforward--just as you'd expect with a Mac.
Automator. Your personal automation assistant.
Automator brings remarkable speed to any task that's often repeated on your computer. Leopard adds even more muscle to Automator, making it easy to automate more kinds of tasks.

A host of new features that make life easier for every developer.

Rock-solid foundations.
Explore the core technologies that power Leopard.

64-Bit. Advanced precision in one OS.
Leopard delivers 64-bit power in one, universal OS. Now the Cocoa application frameworks, as well as graphics, scripting, and the UNIX foundations of the Mac, are all 64-bit. And since you get full performance and compatibility for your 32-bit applications and drivers, you don't need to update everything on your system just to run a single 64-bit application.

Multicore. Fire on all cylinders.
Today's Mac computers offer astounding performance with up to eight cores of processing power. So how do you take full advantage? Simple. With Leopard. A rearchitected system, finely tuned key applications, and powerful new tools for developers make Leopard the perfect OS for your multicore Mac.

Security. Safer by design.
Every Mac is secure--right out of the box--thanks to the proven foundation of Mac OS X. Apple engineers have designed Leopard with more security to protect your personal data and make your online life safer.

Core Animation. Drag-and-drop-dead gorgeous.
Welcome to the next level in computer animation. No, it's not a feature film--it's your desktop. Core Animation is an API that makes it simple for Mac developers to add visually stunning graphics and animations to applications. Without any esoteric graphics and math techniques, you can create fluid, stutter-free effects and experiences as groundbreaking as Spaces and Time Machine.

UNIX. The UNIX you know. The Mac you love.
What can the fully UNIX-compliant Leopard do? It can run any POSIX-compliant source code. Help you make the most of multicore systems. Put a new, tabbed-interface Terminal at your fingertips. Introduce a whole host of new features that make life easier for every developer. So, really, what can't it do?

Create stunning Mac applications more quickly.

Ready. Set. Code.
Discover developer tools you can build on.

Xcode. Build fast. Work smart.
Xcode 3.0 delivers better performance, as well as innovations that let you create stunning Mac applications more quickly. Enjoy a graphical IDE in which form focuses your functions. Delight in a debugger so groundbreaking, you'll make mistakes just to see it in action.

Xray. Apps, the developer will see you now.
When you need help debugging, Xcode 3.0 offers an extraordinary new program: Xray. Taking interface cues from timeline editors such as GarageBand, Xray lets you visualize application performance like never before.

Dashcode. Widgets without the wait.
Ever wish you could make your very own Dashboard widget? A handy RSS feed of your favourite blog, maybe. Or a miniature photocast of your iPhoto library. Something uniquely useful, uniquely you. Say hello to Dashcode. Now you can get a widget up and running in minutes, even if you've never written a line of code in your life.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Economical way to upgrade your Mac   December 3, 2007
  4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Leopard is a valuable upgrade to the MacOS which offers both visible and under-the-bonnet improvements to what was already a strong, stable and exciting operating system. Upgrading is relatively painless, but upgraders should ensure that they have run Disk First Aid before they begin, and, crucially, uninstalled APE application enhancer if this is on the system. Compatibility with earlier applications is generally good, but QuarkXpress 6.5 users will need to consider the benefits carefully. For those running more than one Mac, the Family Pack is extremely good value, at 1.5x the price of a single license for up to five Macs.

The visible improvements to OS X are technical, aesthetic and practical. The inclusion of the Time Machine backup system effectively completes the Mac offering as a stable and safe out-of-the box product. Aesthetically, Leopard offers a more subdued look, with better icons and more integration of animation and state-change -- for example in the way it shows folders. The addition of an iTunes-like browser adds a further way to view your folders. Mail also gets a makeover, with the ability to use templates, and crucially, to create your own. Practically speaking, the tighter integration of Mail and iCal substantially improves the OS as an integrated personal information manager. Quickview offers a new way to take control of your files, by instantly previewing many (but not all) file types. The dashboard benefits substantially from the ability to make a widget from any part of any web-page, on-the-fly. Finally, the Spaces function provides a welcome return to an older concept of virtual desktops.

Invisibly, the system is now 64-bit throughout, which should provide speed improvements on many systems. Once properly installed, most users have found it to be highly stable -- something which is essential for front-end improvements like Spaces to make sense. The integration between iCal and Mail is underpinned by OS level implementation of this kind of data, which makes it much more available for other applications, such as Bento from Filemaker, and Merlin, to use. This make iCal a collaborator with rather than a competitor against more advanced time-management applications. Core image has been improved, though it may be some time before major applications begin to exploit this. PDF support has been improved, as has connectivity with Windows SMB drives.

3rd party developers have been reluctant to qualify their earlier versions for Leopard, although Adobe have now confirmed that CS2 does work with Leopard, apart from some Bridge incompatibilities. Quark have refused to confirm compliance of 6.5. Most users have discovered that trashing the Quark preferences and forcing it to rebuild the printer list is necessary, and many users have found that Quark PDF no longer works. On the plus side, it is for the first time possible to print a PDF from Quark using the Mac OS PDF printing services, though this is a work-around rather than an improvement. Avid have not yet qualified their software for Leopard, though AvidXpress Pro and ProTools started up without problems on my G4 Powerbook -- something which did not happen with the upgrade to Tiger until Avid released an update.

Upgrading is a relatively painless process -- certainly compared to upgrading any version of Windows. However, the APE Application Enhancer from Unsanity must be removed before upgrading, as this will prevent the OS from ever starting up. A number of 3rd party applications, including Logitech's, install this, so check carefully, even if you have never deliberately installed it. As always, you should also repair permissions before upgrading. Finally, after the installation is finished, you should immediately load the software updates.

The price of upgrading is relatively low, both in terms of what it does to your existing software investment, and in terms of time and money. Leopard is particularly economical if you are buying a family pack and upgrading several Macs.

For me, the only false note with Leopard is the inclusion of Boot Camp, rather than a more sophisticated system for installing Windows on Intel Macs. The cost of installing Windows is quite high, because you have to purchase a full Windows license. For that price, most users who want to take advantage of both systems will probably find something like Parallels desktop, which allows you to run both at once, a better bet.

The final verdict is that Leopard is an extremely worthwhile upgrade, unless you rely on an unqualified application like QuarkXpress 6.5. Although our home systems are now on Leopard, at work all the machines will remain on Tiger until we can guarantee the Quark workaround, or until we move to a later Quark version.



3 out of 5 stars Only a minor upgrade that hurts performance of older machines   December 1, 2007
  4 out of 6 found this review helpful

I have a G4 PowerPC running at 1.67 GHz with 1 GB memory, and my wife has an iBook. So I judge Leopard by its value as an upgrade over the previous operating system. I bought the Family Pack because I understood that it (a) introduced new useful features and (b) because it improved the performance of older machines such as the ones I own. I loaded Leopard on to the G4, it took sometime but everything went fine. My first reaction is that my G4 now runs slower, or more exactly certain tasks such as start-up, close-down, launching applications and accessing files on the hard disk appear to take more time than in the past. Secondly it jams just as (in-)frequently, i.e. occasionally when accessing video material. Thirdly the added features such as the new desktop and finder are nice and useful to have items, but I don't know if I absolutely needed them. I have not used Spaces, iChat and Time Machine so I can't really judge yet. The new mail client is certainly a major upgrade, and about time too. So overall I don't share all the 5-star positive comments made by others. I'm a mac user now for 2-3 years, and I fully appreciate the advantages of OS X over you know who. But I was expecting more from a major upgrade: faster more stable operation on older PowerPC machines as well as the latest machines, and a little bit more in terms of overhauling the user experience as opposed to enhancing what was already there. I am not convinced that upgrading the OS on my wifes iBook is worth it, in particular if the performance is hurt. Overall the upgrade is useful, but not as much as I expected. The performance of my G4 PowerPC appears to be adversely affected. And I am not convinced its worth 120.


5 out of 5 stars AWESOME   October 18, 2007
  12 out of 44 found this review helpful

Well having being a devoted Mac user now for little over a month i can say im in love! it rocks and is fantastic and beats windows by miles! seems windows in stuck in the past. this version just looks amazing and i am getting it. anyone who is not sure about a mac because they dont know how one use is all it takes!

AMAZING JUST AMAZNG



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