
Quick Scan
The good: extra hard drive space, Exchange support.
The bad: older printer and scanner drivers don't work.
The verdict: Meh. Life would be better without it, but not so much that I would reinstall 10.5.
Snow Leopard Report 3 Weeks In: Meh!
Believe it or not, I rarely get Apple products right when they are released. I'm sure most of my friends consider me an Apple fanboy, but I like to think I have a more reasoned approach. But this time, I pre-ordered Snow Leopard from Amazon because it was cheap, and I wanted to see if their slow free shipping would arrive quickly with a pre-order. (It arrived Monday after the launch. Not bad)
I really wanted to like Snow Leopard and find all kinds of little gems. I also wanted it to kick some Windows 7 butt since they will inevitably be compared. So I read up on it in advance and looked forward to exploring what it had to offer. I wanted a little Dazzle. Just $30 worth.
So I installed it on 2 of my 3 Macs the week I got it and have been using it daily ever since. So what has been the result? Meh. And by that, I mean, "what new OS?" It has some advantages and some disadvantages compared to Leopard, but it comes out a wash in my book.
So what didn't I like? Mostly driver issues. I have 2 several thousand dollar (at one time) large format Epson printers that the drivers haven't been updated for. Yes, it's one of those things you can check out in advance and I should have remembered that Epson has ALWAYS sucked at delivering quality Mac drivers for new OS's. But since the problem only comes up every 2 years or so, I tend to forget how much I hate Epson in between releases. (And I do mean hate them. I have a stack of ink cartridges 4 feet high that they won't recycle and there is no after-market for.)
Also, I have a multi function HP printer/scanner that is supposed to work with Snow Leopard but doesn't. It prints, but the scanning software doesn't come up where it supposed to. I may be able to wrangle it into working order somehow, but I just don't have the time for it now.
What's to like in Snow Leopard? Unfortunately, I can't think of much. I know it's supposed to have a lot of new tech under the hood, but honestly, I can't think of many ways it has improved my Mac experience. There are 2 ways (sort of) that come to mind.
The first is that it takes up less hard drive space. I have one Macbook that is always bumping up against the limit of the internal hard drive. Snow Leopard freed up about 10 GB of space on it, so that's a bonus.
The other major feature is great for some users, just not me. That feature is MS Exchange support. I predict this will be what Snow Leopard is remembered for. Exchange support is the last major barrier preventing Macs from being mainstream business machines. Yes, MS Excel and PowerPoint are not 100% compatible with their Mac versions, but those are smaller issues. Just having Exchange capability in Macs makes them viable to use in a regular business setting. No more having a cheap PC just to run Outlook along side your Mac in the workplace. Yeah!
Too bad it doesn't help me. I'm not on Exchange anymore. But I'm happy for those who need it.
So where do I go from here? At first I thought about reinstalling Leopard, but fortunately, I have a backup version (that I forgot about) of Leopard on another internal drive. So for now I'm booting into 10.5 when I need the large format printers, which is not too often. Simply, it not so bad that I invest the time to reinstall 10.5 and it's not so good that I invest the time and money to find the work-arounds to make everything run smooth in one OS.
It's just meh.
UPDATE: See more recent conclusions in the comments.
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Your Comments:
Avi
09/24/2009 at 10:20 AM
Austin
09/24/2009 at 10:32 AM
But I'd almost have done it JUST for the nicer Exposé! (Really!) I pull articles thru NetNewsWire then read the couple of dozen Safari articles on the train, and now it's possible to see them laid out so I can pick my next article.
Also, Safari more stable (tho Click2Flash gets credit, too). Finally, it IS a bit snappier and stable when resource-constrained, as this more-than-3-year-old MBP is.
Walt French
09/24/2009 at 11:06 AM
Anton Barksdale
09/24/2009 at 04:20 PM
adrianIII
09/24/2009 at 04:53 PM
bscenefilms
09/25/2009 at 11:02 AM
Orc4hire
09/27/2009 at 06:59 PM
and on an external LaCie/Pioneer burner.
May have to go back to Leopard.
Rob Caruso
09/29/2009 at 05:05 AM
The printer driver can be downloaded from Epson and emulated in in Rosetta. The problem is that SL will go look for a driver for you and report back the there aren't any drivers for it. When visiting Epson's 10.6 page, it doesn't list the 4000 as a supported printer, but going back and DLing the 10.5 driver and reinstalling does the trick.
Updated conclusion: Still nothing to love, but I am liking the look of the Dock's pop up menus vs. 10.5's.
chris Kerins
10/05/2009 at 02:39 PM
After I upgraded to Snow Leopard, I tried to open Aperture, and was told that Aperture 2 is required for compatibility with Snow Leopard. Unfortunately, it's a $99 upgrade, and Aperture 3 is probably due out soon. I'm not about to pay $99 for software that will be obsolete in a month!
Justin
12/12/2009 at 10:02 PM