To get things clear, I was a huge PC fan up until 2004 when
a friend introduced me to the coolest, cleanest, most polished computer realm that
existed. I entered the Mac world right
around the time Leopard was introduced.
My wife purchased a MacBook Pro for me; a pre-unibody that was maxed on
ram and hard-drive space. Leopard was a
great OS to learn Mac on, because it was simple, efficient, and powerful. When Mac introduced Snow Leopard, many of my
friends were complaining about paying money for a “small” upgrade.
Now, many of those friends refuse to upgrade to Lion because
of how solid Snow Leopard truly was. I
was skeptical about Lion when it was released, but the moment Pro Tools became
compatible, I dove in. I wasn’t
exceptionally thrilled with Lion, but it was a little more polished and
integrated a few great iOS ideas. So,
when apple announced Mountain Lion last year, I was once again skeptical. If Lion wasn’t so impressive, how is a year
of development going to bring a great experience back to the Mac?
They do it by rounding up all the loose ends Lion left
answered. Once Avid (Pro Tools) stated
there were minimal issues with Mountain Lion, I dove in again. It feels like an entire upgrade from Snow
Leopard, which truly fits the Apple release model. Think of the iPhone. The last two models have been released with
an updated model to tide over Apple junkies (which I shamelessly am) until a
revolutionary product can be released the following year. Lion is the initial product, like the iPhone
4, while Mountain Lion makes the initial product its best, like the iPhone 4s.
I would like to share a few of my favorite features from the
little time I’ve spent with the OS. The
first treat I wanted to try was AirPlay mirroring from my MacBook Pro. It was as simple as clicking on the display
preferences tab and clicking on Apple TV.
I was streaming my computer’s desktop to my 46” TV in 1080p, and was
immediately impressed with the picture quality and sharpness of the font. There’s some lag, but that will probably be
addressed in 10.8.1 or a nearby release.
In the top right corner there is a new icon, which pulls your
notification center from the right side.
While many see the notification center as minor iOS integration, it is a
hot feature for me because I knew having it would allow me to integrate my
calendars, and receive notifications from whichever device I’m sitting at. The final feature I’m enjoying is the new
built-in dictation feature. So far it
has been extremely accurate, and has allowed me to dictate an entire paragraph
without a break, or error.
To me, Mountain Lion feels like a new and complete OS. I could never figure out what made Lion feel
so unworthy of being a new OS version until I tried the newest platform. Thankfully, Apple tied up one final loose end
to maximize the Mountain Lion experience.
All transitions and effects appear to happen cleanly, and without
lag. I am comfortable in the Mountain
Lion world, just like I was in Snow Leopard.
That’s always subject to change though, especially since the experience
has been short so far.


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