First Time In The City Mac OS

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  • The SSD has now been formatted as a Mac OS Extended (journaled) volume named ‘MacOS’. Continue using this guide to format the disk as an AFPS volume, however if a Mac OS Extended (journaled) volume is desired you may now stop. 8) From the previous step we need to note the identifier of the new volume (red outlined box).
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  • The history of macOS, Apple's current Mac operating system originally named Mac OS X until 2012 and then OS X until 2016, began with the company's project to replace its 'classic' Mac OS.That system, up to and including its final release Mac OS 9, was a direct descendant of the operating system Apple had used in its Macintosh computers since their introduction in 1984.

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Editor’s Note: In order to familiarize you with the next major version of Mac OS X, code-named Leopard, we’re taking a closer look at each of the features Apple has unveiled. In this first installment, we profile Leopard’s back-up feature, Time Machine.

Chances are, you have data on your Mac that you’re not backing up. Don’t feel too bad about it—if Apple’s figures are correct, less than four percent of Mac users perform regular, automated backups. The company hopes to change that with Time Machine, the built-in backup feature that will debut in Mac OS X 10.5. Here’s how this new OS X capability will allow you, quite literally, to go back in time.

How it works

Time Machine uses a unique interface that turns the rather boring task of backing up and restoring files into something that you may actually enjoy doing. And you may not even have to think too much about the “backing up” portion of the exercise—according to Apple, Leopard will automatically back up your files as you work.

But Time Machine doesn’t just create one backup—it keeps a continual chain of backups over time, allowing you to turn the clock back in time to find the file you’re looking for.

Time Machine backs up every important file on your Mac—system software, your photos and music, and your documents—and it does this automatically and continually. (To save space, Time Machine doesn’t bother with temporary files such as your browser cache.) This addresses one of the biggest issues with backups: it takes quite a bit of time to set up an automated backup system that successfully backs up your entire machine. As described by Apple, Time Machine aims to make the process so it so simple that you don’t need to take any action (other than have another hard drive or file server available to store the backups).

Backing up and restoring files is not a new idea that Apple invented just for Leopard; lots of software performs this very task. But what makes Time Machine unique is its attention to usability. Instead of a traditional series of application windows, Time Machine presents your backups as a series of application windows embedded in a three-dimensional vista, complete with a scroll bar that extends backward in time:

You can access Time Machine in any program that’s been modified to support it—most Time Machine sessions will be attempts to retrieve old files, and will therefore use the Finder, but any application that’s got its own separate data store (Address Book, for example) can also be thrown into the wayback machine.

To retrieve a lost file using Time Machine, you first use the Finder to open the folder or disk you’d like to examine, and then click on the Time Machine button in the Dock. When you do that, your screen changes to a huge stack of Finder windows stretching backward in time. Drag the time-scale slider on the right up to move further back in time, and the window for the selected period flips to the front of the stack, with those that were previously in front of it dropping off the bottom of the screen. It’s hard to describe, but amazingly intuitive when you see it in motion—check out the QuickTime movie on Apple’s Time Machine page to see the feature in action.

(And even when you’re using Time Machine, you’re still in the Finder. If you need to open a folder or switch to another view in order to confirm that you’ve found the right file, you can still do it—the Finder behaves normally, even while it’s peering back in time.)

There’s also a Fly button that zooms back in history, which will automatically move back through history until it finds a time period whose data differs from that of the most-recently-viewed era. This makes it easy to see exactly when a folder’s contents changed, and exactly what those contents were. When you find the file or folder you need, a click of the Restore button brings it back to your present system.

Behind the scenes, Time Machine’s doing a lot of clever things in order to create the impression of a seamless backup. The first time you run Time Machine, it copies the entire contents of your drive (cache files excepted) to the backup drive. After that first process, Time Machine only backs up files that have been added or modified.

Just as Mac OS X notifies Spotlight when a file has been modified (so it can be re-indexed), Leopard will notify Time Machine of any changes to your Mac’s files. Every so often, Time Machine kicks into action and copies those changed files to your backup drive. At the end of the day, Time Machine coalesces all of those changes into a single collection of changes for the entire day, and adds it to a pile of days that extends as far back into history as your hard drive’s capacity will allow.

In its promotional materials for Time Machine, Apple states that Time Machine works with “external hard drives” and servers. In reality, it will work with any non-bootable volume formatted in Apple’s HFS Extended format. That drive can be stowed inside a Mac Pro, attached on the end of a FireWire or USB cable, or even mounted on your desktop from elsewhere on your network. The one big catch is, the entire volume must be devoted to Time Machine—you can’t just stow Time Machine files inside a folder on a larger volume.

What happens when your backup volume fills up? Apple says that Time Machine will give you a few options: First, you’ll be able to cull out extraneous or unimportant files that are taking up space on your backup drive. Second, it’ll offer to step you through the process of moving your files to a larger backup drive. And third, it’ll let you scale back the reach of Time Machine—for example, reducing your backup from a year to nine months in order to reclaim drive space.

And what if the unthinkable happens and your drive crashes, losing all your data? Install a new hard drive, point Time Machine at your backup volume, and your Mac will reassemble your drive from the data on the backup volume using a file-transfer process similar to Apple’s Migration Assistant.

Why it was added

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During the keynote, Apple executive Scott Forstall pointed out that only about 25 percent of Mac users back up regularly, and of those, only about 4 percent really have a fully automated and regularly scheduled solution. As more and more of our lives are stored on our Macs—countless pictures of family and friends, thousands of music files, iDVD and iMovie projects, and so on—good, dependable, and automatic backups have become increasingly important.

For me personally, this hit home when I lost about 30 pictures of our first child. These images are irreplaceable, and at the time, they existed only in iPhoto. One small hard drive hiccup later, and the images exist only in my memory. Since that day, I’ve focused on making sure that I always have redundant backups of my critical files. But doing this is a time-consuming process, and, when I get busy, I really have to force myself to stop and take the time to do the backups.

With a fully automated system in Leopard, and one that appears to be a joy to use, the last excuses for backing up will vanish. And that’s a good thing—speaking as someone who knows, you do not want to lose your important files, images, or music due to a hard drive crash. And yes, this means you’ll need to invest in an external hard drive to store your backed-up data, but really, that’s a small price to pay for the peace of mind you’ll have.

Who’s it for

Time Machine is primarily targeted at home users. If you’re using a Mac in a corporate environment, you are probably already being backed up by Retrospect or another network-wide backup solution. But for home users, it’s a paradigm shift in backups. No longer will backups be an afterthought; instead, the presence of Time Machine will hopefully inspire more Mac users to back up regularly.

What’s missing

First Time In The City Mac OS

How will Time Machine work for people who modify gigantic files on a regular basis? For example, consider a 1GB database file. If I make a tiny modification to that file, Time Machine writes out another 1GB file to record that change. As a result, drive space on my backup device could quickly disappear. Apple suggests that the answer will be for application developers to modify their programs to break up data into more discrete elements that can be backed up more simply by Time Machine—something they may already be doing in order to make their files searchable via Spotlight. But will this pitfall drastically reduce Time Machine’s usefulness for some users?

It’s also unclear what Time Machine will mean for laptop users. Will Time Machine automatically look for and connect to a backup volume on a local network, or will such a procedure require human intervention? (After all, requiring human intervention is what got us into this never-backed-up mess in the first place.)

Finally, it’s not yet known just how much you’ll be able to customize Time Machine relative to which files and/or folders it will back up. Can you exclude entire hard drives? Can you exclude any folder? Or an individual file? Apple hasn’t indicated what the answers are to those questions.

What it means

Apple has been very successful in getting all of us to store our digital lives on its hardware. With the announcement of Time Machine, it seems the company is reminding us just how important those digital memories are and making it as simple as possible to make sure we never lose any of them.

[ Senior Editor Rob Griffiths runs the Mac OS X Hints Web site. ]

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Since the release of System 1 in January 1984, Apple has played an integral role in designing and implementing the graphical user interface (GUI) as we know it.

With the announcement of OS X Mountain Lion this week, Apple is continuing the process it started with Lion by streamlining the connection between the Mac and iOS.

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We wanted to take a look at some of the biggest changes in the history of the Mac Operating System over the last 28 years. Looking back, I can't help but be struck by how many elements of the original Macintosh OS are still there more than 30 years after the project started taking shape.

It's a testament to the work of Bill Atkinson, Andy Hertzfeld, Bud Tribble and the other members of the original Macintosh team that so many aspects from System 1 have become integral to personal computing as we know it today.

There are a few phases in the evolution of the Mac OS that are of particular note. System 7 was the longest-running release for Apple (until OS X); it shipped with all Macintosh machines from 1991 to 1997. If you're in your mid-to-late 20s and used a Mac in elementary or middle school, chances are it was running some iteration of System 7.

One of the many challenges Apple faced in the 1990s was figuring out a new operating system strategy. As revolutionary as the original Mac OS work was, by 1994 it was starting to look stagnant and stale. This was especially true after the first release of Windows NT in 1993, which cemented Microsoft's place in the corporate and enterprise space.

After the Copland project was cancelled in 1996, Apple was left to search for an operating system it could acquire. That led to the purchase of NeXT and its NeXTSTEP operating system.

Not only would NeXT technology serve as the foundation for the future of Apple as it is known today (OS X and iOS are direct descendants of NeXTSTEP), it was responsible for bringing Steve Jobs back to Apple.

It would end up taking ten years from the beginning of the search for a next-generation Mac OS. But the hunt finally reached its quarry with the release of Mac OS X in 2001. But it would take until Mac OS X 10.2 (Jaguar) before the system was really able to hold its own.

Over the last decade, OS X has evolved into a powerful desktop and server platform — while also serving as the core for iOS. With OS X Mountain Lion, Apple is bringing more of the elements and features of its mobile OS to the desktop.

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Vintage computer fans who want to take a look at more screenshots of classic Mac OS versions should check out Marcin Wichary's GUIdebook Gallery and Nathan Lineback's collection of GUI history.

Gallery created by Chelsea Stark