fbpx
Wikipedia

List of macOS built-in apps

This is a list of macOS built-in apps and system components.

Applications

App Store

The Mac App Store is macOS's digital distribution platform for macOS apps, created and maintained by Apple Inc. based on the iOS version, the platform was announced on October 20, 2010, at Apple's "Back to the Mac" event.[1][2][3] First launched on January 6, 2011, as part of the free Mac OS X 10.6.6 update for all current Snow Leopard users,[1][2] Apple began accepting app submissions from registered developers on November 3, 2010, in preparation for its launch.[4] After 24 hours of release, Apple announced that there were over one million downloads.[5]

Automator

Automator is an app used to create workflows for automating repetitive tasks into batches for quicker alteration via point-and-click (or drag and drop). This saves time and effort over human intervention to manually change each file separately. Automator enables the repetition of tasks across a wide variety of programs, including Finder, Safari, Calendar, Contacts and others. It can also work with third-party applications such as Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop or Pixelmator. The icon features a robot holding a pipe, a reference to pipelines, a computer science term for connected data workflows. Automator was first released with Mac OS X Tiger (10.4).[6]

Books

Apple Books was first released in OS X Mavericks.

Calculator

Calculator is a basic calculator application made by Apple Inc. and bundled with macOS. It has three modes: basic, scientific, and programmer. Basic includes a number pad, buttons for adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing, as well as memory keys. Scientific mode supports exponents and trigonometric functions, and programmer mode gives the user access to more options related to computer programming.

The Calculator program has a long history going back to the very beginning of the Macintosh platform, where a simple four-function calculator program was a standard desk accessory from the earliest system versions. Though no higher math capability was included, third-party developers provided upgrades, and Apple released the Graphing Calculator application with the first PowerPC release (7.1.2) of the Mac OS, and it was a standard component through Mac OS 9. Apple currently ships a different application called Grapher.

Calculator has Reverse Polish notation support, and can also speak the buttons pressed and result returned.

The Calculator appeared first as a desk accessory in first version of Macintosh System for the 1984 Macintosh 128k. Its original incarnation was developed by Chris Espinosa and its appearance was designed, in part, by Steve Jobs when Espinosa, flustered by Jobs's dissatisfaction with all of his prototype designs, conceived an application called The Steve Jobs Roll Your Own Calculator Construction Set that allowed Jobs to tailor the look of the calculator to his liking. Its design was maintained with the same basic math operations until the final release of classic Mac OS in 2002.[7]

A Dashboard Calculator widget is included in all versions of macOS from Mac OS X Tiger onwards. It only has the basic mode of its desktop counterpart. Since the release of OS X Yosemite, there is also a simple calculator widget available in the notifications area.[8]

Since the release of Mac OS X Leopard, simple arithmetic functions can be calculated from Spotlight feature.[9] They include the standard addition, subtraction, division, multiplication, exponentiation and the use of the percent sign to denote percentage.

Calendar

Calendar is a personal calendar app made by Apple Inc. that runs on both the macOS desktop operating system and the iOS mobile operating system. It offers online cloud backup of calendars using Apple's iCloud service, or can synchronize with other calendar services, including Google Calendar and Microsoft Exchange Server.

Chess

 
Screenshot of Apple Chess

Apple Chess is a 3D chess game for macOS, developed by Apple Inc. as a fork of GNOME Chess (formerly "glChess").[10] Its history dates back to OpenStep and Mac OS X 10.2. It supports chess variants such as crazyhouse and suicide chess. Apple redistributes the source code under its own Apple Sample Code License, after a special permission has been granted from the original authors of GNOME Chess (which is licensed under GPL3).[11][10] Apple ships with the game also the Sjeng chess engine (GPL).

Contacts

Contacts, called Address Book before OS X Mountain Lion, is a computerized address book included with Apple Inc.'s macOS. It includes various synchronizing capabilities and integrates with other macOS applications and features.

Dictionary

Dictionary is an application that includes an in-built dictionary and thesaurus.[12]

FaceTime

FaceTime is a video calling app released by Apple to replace iChat on Mac.

Find My

First available in macOS Catalina, it tracks location of compatible devices connected via iCloud.[13]

Font Book

Home

Home is the front-end for Apple's HomeKit software framework providing integration with other smart devices.

Image Capture

 
Image Capture on macOS Big Sur

Image Capture is an application program from Apple that enables users to upload pictures from digital cameras or scanners which are either connected directly to the computer or the network. It provides no organizational tools like iPhoto but is useful for collating pictures from a variety of sources with no need for drivers.

Image Capture is scriptable with AppleScript, and may be manipulated with Tiger's Automator application. As of Tiger, Image Capture's AppleScript dictionary does not open in Script Editor. As of Snow Leopard only the Image Capture Web Server opens in Script Editor.

Launchpad

 
Launchpad as seen in macOS Ventura

Launchpad is an application launcher that was first introduced in OS X Lion. It displays all applications installed on the user's machine in a grid of icons, which can be put into folders. Launchpad provides an alternative way to start applications in macOS, in addition to other options such as the Dock, Finder, and Spotlight search. Launchpad can be used to uninstall apps that came from the Mac App Store.[14]

Mail

Maps

Apple Maps is a map service released by Apple.

Messages

Messages was released to replace iChat on Mac.

Mission Control

Music

News

Apple News is a digital news platform released by Apple.

Notes

Notes is macOS's notetaking app. It had first been introduced to macOS starting with OS X Mountain Lion, after first being developed for iOS. It serves as a local note-taking application, as well as allowing sharing via iCloud or other cloud services.

Photo Booth

Photo Booth is a camera application for macOS. It utilizes the front iSight camera to take pictures and videos.[15][16]

Photos

Photos is a photo management and editing application that was designed based on the in-built app released for iOS 8. On macOS, Photos was first introduced to OS X Yosemite users in the 10.10.3 update on April 8, 2015,[17][18][19] replacing iPhoto.[20][21]

Podcasts

Preview

QuickTime Player

The QuickTime player is an application that can play video and sound files.[22]

Reminders

Task-managing app introduced to OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and iOS 5.

Safari

Safari is the default web browser included with macOS since version 10.3 "Panther", where it replaces Internet Explorer for Mac OS X. It uses the WebKit browser engine.[23]

Shortcuts

Shortcuts is a visual scripting application.

Siri

Introduced in macOS 10.12, Siri is a digital assistant that allows the user to interact with it to ask questions, make recommendations, and perform actions on the device. It had been previously included in iOS.

Stickies

Stocks

Stocks is an application that provides information regarding stocks of various companies around the world.

System Settings

TV

TextEdit

Time Machine

Time Machine is an application where the user can back up their files.[24][25]

Voice Memos

Voice Memos, introduced in macOS Mojave,[26] is a basic application with the capability of recording audio. In addition to this, it allows several editing functions, such as trimming and overwriting.[27]

Utilities

Activity Monitor

Activity Monitor is a system monitor for the macOS operating system, which also incorporates task manager functionality.[28][29] Activity Monitor appeared in Mac OS X v10.3, when it subsumed the functionality of the programs Process Viewer (a task manager) and CPU Monitor found in the previous version of OS X.[30][31] In OS X 10.9, Activity Monitor was significantly revamped and gained a fifth tab for "energy" (in addition to CPU, memory, disk, and network).[32]

AirPort Utility

AirPort Utility is a program that allows users to configure an AirPort wireless network and manage services associated with and devices connected to AirPort Routers. It comes pre-installed on macOS, and is available to download for Microsoft Windows and iOS. AirPort Utility is unique in that it offers network configuration in a native application as opposed to a web application. It provides a graphical overview of AirPort devices attached to a network, and provides tools to manage each one individually. It allows users to configure their network preferences, assign Back to My Mac accounts to the network, and configure USB attached Printers and hard drives.[33] The current versions are 6.3.6 for recent versions of macOS, 5.6.1 for Microsoft Windows and older versions[34] of Mac OS X,[35] and 1.3.4 for iOS.[36]

On January 30, 2013, Apple released AirPort Utility 6.0 for macOS featuring a redesign of the user interface focused on increasing usability for novice users.[37] Reception was mixed with some media outlets reporting IT professionals and network administrators being frustrated over some removed features.[37] It was reported that most end users, however, wouldn't notice the feature omissions.[38] Users requiring the removed features can still access the previous version of AirPort Utility using a workaround.[39]

Audio MIDI Setup

The Audio MIDI Setup utility is a program that comes with the macOS operating system for adjusting the computer's audio input and output configuration settings and managing MIDI devices.

It was first introduced in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard as a simplified way to configure MIDI Devices. Users need to be aware that prior to this release, MIDI devices did not require this step, and it mention of it might be omitted from MIDI devices from third-party manufactures.

Bluetooth File Exchange

Bluetooth File Exchange is a utility that comes with the macOS operating system, used to exchange files to or from a Bluetooth-enabled device.[40] For example, it could be used to send an image to a cellphone, or to receive an image or other documents from a PDA.

Boot Camp Assistant

Boot Camp Assistant assists users with installing Windows on their Mac using Boot Camp.[41] It does not support Macs with Apple silicon processors, as Windows 10 does not have a commercial version of Windows 10 that runs on ARM based processors.

ColorSync Utility

ColorSync Utility is a macOS application used for management of color profiles and filters used in Apple's PDF workflows, or applying filters to PDF documents.

The interface is composed of two parts, the document browser and the utility window. The document browser allows the user to zoom in and out of an image or apply a Filter to it. The utility window has several options, including Profile First Aid, Profiles, Devices, Filters and Calculator.

  • Profile First Aid allows the user to repair ColorSync color profiles so they conform to the International Color Consortium specification.
  • Profiles allows the user to browse the profiles installed on the system, grouped by location, class or space, and graphically compare any two profiles. The profile map is displayed as a rotatable, scalable 3D object and can be plotted in CIELAB, CIELUV, YXY, YUV and CIEXYZ.
  • The Devices section allows the user to see a list of all registered ColorSync devices such as displays and printers, and see what ColorSync profile is applied to each one. It is also possible to override the default setting.
  • The Filters section allows the user to build and modify PDF filters that are available to the rest of the operating system. Each filter can be set to appear in one of three domains: Application, PDF Workflows, and Printing.

Filters set to Printing will appear in the drop-down menu under the "Save as PDF..." button in the standard Mac OS X print dialog box. Filters set to PDF Workflow will appear in the Quartz Filters drop-down menu in the ColorSync section of a print dialog box. The default filters are:

  • Black & White
  • Blue Tone
  • Create Generic PDFX-3 Document
  • Gray Tone
  • Lightness Decrease
  • Lightness Increase
  • Reduce File Size
  • Sepia Tone

User-created filters can have color management, image effects, PDF retouch, domain selection and comments.

The Color Management section allows assigning a profile, choosing a default profile, rendering intent, converting to a profile or intermediate transform.

The Intermediate Transform section allows adjustment of brightness, tint, hue, saturation, bilevel (high pass filter) or profile assignment, to either grayscale, RGB or CMYK, or all data in the file. This can be applied to either text, graphics, images or shading.

Complex filters can be created by stacking multiple effects. Any changes made to the PDF file can then be saved as a new PDF file.

Calculator can convert between RGB, CMYK and other color value schemes, and features an interactive color-picker for identifying a color on the screen, duplicating a feature of another bundled utility, Digital Color Meter.

ColorSync

ColorSync is Apple Inc.'s color management API for the Classic Mac OS and macOS. Apple developed the original 1.0 version of ColorSync as a Mac-only architecture, which made it into an operating system release in 1993. In the same year, Apple co-founded the International Color Consortium (ICC) to develop a cross-platform profile format which became part of ColorSync 2.0. The system Color Management Module (CMM) was "LinoColorCMM", which was developed by Linotype-Hell AG (now part of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG). The same CMM was used in Microsoft Windows 2000 and XP under the rubric of "Image Color Management" (ICM).[citation needed] Apple, with the help of Adobe had ported ColorSync 2.0 and its SDK to Microsoft Windows. With ColorSync 3.0, the Windows version which was initially planned was discontinued. ColorSync 4.0 is the latest version, introduced in Mac OS X 10.1.

To deal with color gamut issues, ColorSync provides several different methods of doing color matching. For instance, perceptual matching tries to preserve as closely as possible the relative relationships between colors, even if all the colors must be systematically distorted in order to get them to fit within the gamut of the destination device. Because the human eye is more sensitive to color differences rather than absolute colors, this method tends to produce the best-looking results, subjectively speaking, for many common uses, but there are other methods that work better in some cases. (This set of rendering intents is part of the ICC system, and is available on all systems with ICC.)

As dictated by the ICC system, the profile connection space in ColorSync is the CIE XYZ color space. All image input and output devices (scanners, printers, displays) have to be characterized by providing an ICC profile that defines how their color information is to be interpreted relative to this reference color space. This profile might be provided by the device manufacturer, but for better quality results, it might be generated by performing actual measurements on the device with a colorimeter. Thus, when an image is scanned on a scanner, the image file will include a copy of the scanner's profile to characterize the meaning of its color information. Then, before the image is sent to an output device, a matching process converts the color information at the time of rendering from the source profile (that attached to the image) to the destination profile (that attached to the output device) so that the resulting colors print or display as closely as possible to the original image.

Console

Console is a log viewer developed by Apple Inc. and included with macOS. It allows users to search through all of the system's logged messages, and can alert the user when certain types of messages are logged.[42] The Console is generally used for troubleshooting when there is a problem with the computer.[43] macOS itself, as well as any applications that are used, send a constant stream of messages to the system in the form of log files. The console allows users to read the system logs, help find certain ones, monitor them, and filter their contents.[44]

Clicking on "Show Log List" in the toolbar will bring up the Log List. The Log List opens a sidebar which shows all of the different logs that the system maintains. This list helps in viewing the many different logs maintained in various parts of the system by bringing them all together to one place. By clicking on a particular log category, all of the logs will be shown.[45]

The System Log Queries contains all of the logs that have to do with the entire system. This includes system logs as well as individual application logs.[45]

Selecting All Messages gives a live look at your computer's activities, updated live. This includes all activities from both the system as well as any applications running. Logs in this section of the Console are all formatted uniformly. They all include a timestamp, the name of the process or application, and the actual message of the log. When the message displayed includes a paperclip icon next to it, it means that it is a shortened version of a longer report, and clicking the icon will show the complete report.[46]

In addition to viewing all messages, users can also create custom queries with any criteria that they like. These custom queries will filter the messages and will also be shown in the All Messages section. In order to make a new query, choose "New System Log Query" from the File menu.[47]

Digital Color Meter

 
Digital Color Meter running under macOS Monterey

Digital Color Meter is a utility for measuring and displaying the color values of pixels displayed on the screen of a Macintosh computer.

The utility presents a "window" onto the screen which includes a cursor which by default is 1 × 1 pixel in size. The color displayed in that pixel is shown as a color value which may be represented as decimal or hexadecimal RGB triplets, CIE 1931, CIE 1976 or CIELAB triplets or a Tristimulus triplet.

The displayed color could be copied either as a solid color or as the color value which represents it, to be used in other applications (for instance an RGB triplet may be used in a color specification to be used on a World Wide Web page).

Disk Utility

Grapher

Keychain Access

Migration Assistant

 
The Migration Assistant icon in macOS Big Sur and later

Migration Assistant is a utility by Apple Inc. that transfers data, user accounts, computer settings and apps from one Macintosh computer to another computer, or from a full drive backup. As of OS X Lion and later, it can also migrate contacts, calendars, and email accounts and other files from Microsoft Windows.[48] Migration Assistant can be used during initial setup of a new computer or run manually on a system that has already been set up. It may be used multiple times to copy only applications, user account(s), or settings. Its primary purpose is to duplicate the contents and configuration of an existing computer user account(s) on a new one.

The Migration Assistant does not transfer the operating system of the old computer to the new one. Similarly, applications and utilities bundled by Apple with the operating system (e.g. Safari) are not transferred, based on the assumption that the newer machine has the same or newer version already installed. However, settings for these applications (e.g. bookmarks) are transferred.

Screenshot

Available in macOS Mojave (10.14) and above,[49] the Screenshot app bundles features such as screen recording and taking screenshots. Screenshot is initialized whenever the user presses the keyboard shortcuts ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+3, ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+4, ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+5, or ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+6.[50]

Script Editor

System Information

 
System Information running on macOS Big Sur

System Information (previously known as System Profiler) is a software utility derived from field service diagnostics produced by Apple's Service Diagnostic Engineering team, at that time located in Apple satellite buildings in Campbell, California, that was bundled with the classic Mac OS since Mac OS 7.6 under the name Apple System Profiler. In Mac OS X 10.0, the first release of macOS, it was renamed System Profiler; with the release of Mac OS X 10.7 "Lion" it was again renamed to System Information.[51] Other new features in Lion are the ability to look up support information for the user's hardware model as well.[52] In OS X Mountain Lion and later versions of macOS users can also access System Information by holding down the option key and "System Information" will replace "About This Mac" in the Apple Menu.

It compiles technical information on all of the installed hardware, devices, drivers, applications, system settings, system software programs and kernel extensions installed on the host computer. It can export this information as plain text, RTF or in the plist XML format. This information is used to diagnose problems. System Profiler can be extremely useful if attempting to diagnose a hardware problem. A user can send the information directly to Apple if the user desires. It has support for scripting automation through AppleScript and some limited support in Automator.

System Information can also be accessed by using the "system_profiler" command through macOS's Terminal application.[53]

Terminal

 
Terminal 2.11 running the top program under macOS

Terminal (Terminal.app) is the terminal emulator included in macOS.[54] Terminal originated in NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP, the predecessor operating systems of macOS.[55]

As a terminal emulator, the application provides text-based access to the operating system, in contrast to the mostly graphical nature of the user experience of macOS, by providing a command-line interface to the operating system when used in conjunction with a Unix shell, such as zsh (the default shell in macOS Catalina[56]).[57] The user can choose other shells available with macOS, such as the KornShell, tcsh, and bash.[57][58]

VoiceOver Utility

VoiceOver is an application where the user can listen to spoken descriptions on the computer.[59][60]

Features

Control Center

Control Center provides access to system controls, such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Sound, in a unified interface accessible from the menu bar. Some of these controls can be added to the menu bar by dragging them from Control Center. Additional components can be added in System Settings.[61] Available controls include:

  • Wi-Fi
  • Bluetooth
  • AirDrop
  • Focus
  • Stage Manager
  • Keyboard Brightness (available on Mac notebooks)
  • Screen Mirroring
  • Display
  • Sound
  • Now Playing
  • Accessibility Shortcuts
  • Battery (available on Mac notebooks)
  • Fast User Switching

Dock

The Dock is the main method of launching applications on macOS.

Finder

Finder is the default file manager and graphical interface shell of macOS.

Notification Center

 
Spotlight in macOS Big Sur

Notification Center displays notifications from apps and websites. Users access Notification Center by clicking the clock in the menu bar on macOS Big Sur or the Notification Center icon in earlier versions of macOS. Notification Center can be customized in System Settings.

Spotlight

Spotlight is macOS's selection-based search system, used for indexing documents, pictures, music, applications, and System Settings within the computer.

Accessibility

Dwell Control

Dwell allows the pointer to be controlled using head or eye tracking technologies. A user can also trigger actions by dwelling or holding the pointer still for a specified amount of time which will trigger the programmed dwell actions.

VoiceOver

System components

Archive Utility

Archive Utility (BOMArchiveHelper until Mac OS X 10.5) is the default archive file handler in macOS. It is usually invoked automatically when opening a file in one of its supported formats.[62] It can be used to create compressed ZIP archives by choosing "Create archive of 'file'" (Leopard: "Compress") in the Finder's File or contextual menu. It is located at /System/Library/CoreServices/Applications/Archive Utility.app in OS X 10.10 and later, /System/Library/CoreServices/Archive Utility.app in 10.5 through 10.9, and /System/Library/CoreServices/BOMArchiveHelper.app in 10.4[63] Prior to Archive Utility's inclusion in Mac OS X v10.3, beginning with Mac OS 7.6, Apple bundled the freeware StuffIt Expander with the operating system.

Invoking Archive Utility manually shows a minimal GUI letting the user change Archive Utility preferences or choose files to compress or uncompress.

BOM is an abbreviation of Bill of Materials. Bill of Materials files or .bom files are used by the macOS Installer program to document where files in an installer bundle are installed, what their file permissions should be, and other file metadata. Thus, a Bill of Materials is read by the Installer, and Archive Utility helps it by extracting the files specified in the BOM.

Crash Reporter

Crash Reporter is the standard crash reporter in macOS.[64] Crash Reporter can send the crash logs to Apple Inc. for their engineers to review.

Crash Reporter has three modes of operations:

  • Basic — The default mode. Only application crashes are reported, and the dialog does not contain any debugging information.
  • Developer — In addition to application crashes, crashes are also displayed for background and system processes.
  • Server — The default for macOS Server systems. No crash reports are shown to the user (though they are still logged).
  • None — Disables the dialog prompt. Crash reports are neither displayed nor logged.

The developer tool CrashReporterPrefs can be used to change modes, as can using the terminal command defaults write com.apple.CrashReporter DialogType [basic|developer|server].

In basic mode, if Crash Reporter notices an application has crashed twice in succession, it will offer to rename the application's preference file and try again (corrupted preference files being a common cause of crashes).[citation needed]

When reporting a crash, the top text field of the window has the crash log, while the bottom field is for user comments. Users may also copy and paste the log into their e-mail client to send to a third-party application developer for the developer to use.

DiskImageMounter

DiskImageMounter is the utility that handles mounting disk volume images in Mac OS X, starting with version 10.3. DiskImageMounter works by either launching a daemon to handle the disk image or by contacting a running daemon and have it mount the disk.

Like BOMArchiveHelper, DiskImageMounter has no GUI when double-clicked; doing so does nothing. The only GUI the program ever displays is a window with a progress bar and mount options (cancel or skip verification) or an error report if it could not mount the image. It is found in /System/Library/CoreServices/DiskImageMounter.app.

Starting with version 10.7, Apple "removed double-click support for images using legacy metadata."[65] DiskImageMounter will not be able to open .img (NDIF only), .smi (self mounting), .dc42 (Disk Copy 4.2), and .dart (DART) disk image formats that was previously supported in version 10.6 and earlier.

DiskImageMounter supports a variety of disk image file types:[66]

  • Apple Disk Image (.dmg, com.apple.disk-image)
  • UDIF disk images (.udif, com.apple.disk-image-udif); UDIF segment (.devs, .dmgpart, com.apple.disk-image-udif-segment)
  • self mounting image (.smi, com.apple.disk-image-smi)
  • DVD/CD-R master image (.toast, .dvdr, .cdr, com.apple.disk-image-cdr, com.roxio.disk-image-toast)
  • disk image segment (dmgpart)[66]
  • raw disk image (OSTypes: devr, hdrv, DDim, com.apple.disk-image-raw)
  • PC drive container (OSTypes: OPCD, com.apple.disk-image-pc)
  • ISO image (.iso, public.iso-image)
  • sparse disk image (.sparseimage, com.apple.disk-image-sparse, .sparsebundle)

As of macOS 11.0, support for the following formats has been removed:

  • Disk Copy 4.2 disk image (.dc42, .diskcopy42, com.apple.disk-image-dc42)
  • DART disk image (.dart, com.apple.disk-image-dart)
  • NDIF disk image[nb 1] (.ndif, .img, com.apple.disk-image-ndif); NDIF disk image segment (.imgpart, com.apple.disk-image-ndif-segment)

Directory Utility

Directory Utility is a utility included with the macOS (previously Mac OS X) operating system to configure connections to directory services. Prior to Mac OS X 10.5, this tool was named Directory Access. Apple's LDAP implementation is called Apple Open Directory.

DVD Player

DVD Player (formerly Apple DVD Player) is the default DVD player in macOS. It supports all the standard DVD features such as multiple audio, video & subtitle tracks as well as Dolby Digital 5.1 passthrough, DVD access URLs and closed captions. In some instances, users can choose which VOB file to open. DVD Player is also fully compatible with DVDs authored by DVD Studio Pro and iDVD, including HD DVDs by DVD Studio Pro.[67] As of macOS Mojave, it has been updated to 64-bit, sports a new icon and has better Touch Bar support.

DVD Player complies with most copyright laws, and will thus enforce most restrictive measures of DVD technology, such as region-restrictive encodings and user-inhibited operations ("disabled actions"). It does this even when using an all-region DVD drive. It will even force Apple's Grab (screen-grabbing) program to cease functioning through the Finder interface until the DVD Player application is quit, effectively preventing the user from taking screen captures of visual DVD content.

The software does not contain a DTS decoder, so DTS tracks cannot be played through the Mac's built in speakers or analog output. However, DTS tracks can be output to devices that have their own decoder, so playback is supported through outputs such as S/PDIF, DisplayPort and HDMI. It has never supported the ability to play Blu-Ray discs.[68]

Expansion Slot Utility

Expansion Slot Utility allows manual allocation of PCIe card bandwidth. It is only available on certain Mac Pro models.

Feedback Assistant

The Feedback Assistant is made available to customers in the Apple Software Customer Seeding, AppleSeed for IT or Apple Beta Software programs and allows a user to manually send feedback, reports, or requests to Apple.[69]

HelpViewer

 
Help Viewer running on macOS Monterey

Help Viewer is a WebKit based HTML viewer for macOS aimed at displaying help files and other documentation. It is found in /System/Library/CoreServices/Help Viewer.app. The default file extension is ".help". Help index files are generated with Help Indexer. macOS applications typically use Help Viewer to display their help content, rather than a custom system.

Help Viewer's implementation in Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) found its way to Rob Griffiths' list of Leopard criticisms, because Apple changed the software from a standalone application with a standard window interface to one with a floating window that always appears in front of all other application windows, obscuring the interface for which one is seeking help (see image below).

Although one can close or minimize the Help Viewer window, it is difficult to consult the Help Viewer while simultaneously working with the application, short of changing the size of windows so both fit on the screen.[70] The Help Viewer window also does not work with the Exposé window management feature (Mission Control in OS X 10.7 or later). There is a workaround using the defaults command accessible in the Terminal.[71][72]

iOS App Installer

iOS App Installer is an app that downloads .ipa files for iPadOS applications so that they can be run on Apple silicon-based Macs.

Installer

 
Installer 6.2.0 running installation of VirtualBox on macOS Big Sur

Installer extracts and installs files out of .pkg packages, allowing developers to create uniform software installers.

Installer launches when a package or metapackage file is opened. The installation process itself can vary substantially, as Installer allows developers to customize the information the user is presented with. For example, it can be made to display a custom welcome message, software license and readme. Installer also handles authentication, checks that packages are valid before installing them, and allows developers to run custom scripts at several points during the installation process.[73]

Installer packages have the file extension .pkg. Prior to Mac OS X Leopard, installer packages were implemented as Mac OS X packages.[74] These packages were a collection of files that resided in folders with a .pkg file extension.[75][76] In Mac OS X Leopard the software packaging method was changed to use the XAR (eXtensible ARchiver) file format; the directory tree containing the files is packaged as an xar archive file with a .pkg extension.[77] Instead of distributing multiple files for a package, this allowed all of the software files to be contained in a single file for easier distribution with the benefit of package signing.

loginwindow

The loginwindow process displays the macOS login window at system startup if auto-login is not set, verifies login attempts, and launches login applications. It also implements the Force Quit window, restarts macOS user interface components (the Dock and Finder) if they crash, and handles the logout, restart, and shutdown routines.[78][79]

Users are assigned their own loginwindow when they log in; if a loginwindow process belonging to a specific user is force quit, they will be logged out.[80]

Screen Sharing

Screen Sharing is a utility that may be used to control remote computers and access their files. To connect, one may enter a VNC or Apple ID and authenticate as a local user on the remote computer, or, if the computers are linked via the same Apple ID, automatically initialise the connection. It supports features such as a shared clipboard between the two computers and remotely transferring files. The feature must be enabled in the Sharing preference pane in System Settings.[81]

Software Update

Software Update is a section in System Settings for Mac Software Updates, as well as updates to core Mac apps, starting in macOS Mojave (10.14); it also has an item in the Apple menu. From OS X Mountain Lion (10.8)[82] to macOS High Sierra (10.13), the Mac App Store was used for Software Updates; prior to that, Software Update was a separate utility, which could be launched from the Apple menu or from the Software Update pane in System Settings.

Other

Other system components include:

  • About This Mac, which shows information about the Mac it is running on, such as the hardware, serial number, and macOS version.[83]
  • Captive Network Assistant, a daemon used to access captive portals when connected to public Wi-Fi networks.
  • Certificate Assistant, a utility for creating and verifying digital certificates.
  • ControlStrip, a daemon that controls the Touch Bar.
  • CoreLocationAgent, a daemon responsible for displaying authorization prompts to allow apps and widgets to access location services.[84]
  • FolderActionsDispatcher, a daemon responsible for monitoring changes to the filesystem to run Folder Action scripts.
  • Install Command Line Developer Tools, a utility that allows developers to easily install Xcode's command line developer tools if Xcode is not installed. It can be executed by running xcode-select --install in the terminal.[85]
  • Keychain Circle Notification, a daemon involved in iCloud Keychain syncing.
  • ManagedClient manages various functions pertaining to managed preferences and configuration profiles.[86]
  • Setup Assistant is the application that starts on first boot of a fresh copy of macOS or a new Mac. It configures computer accounts, Apple ID, iCloud, and Accessibility settings. It is also run after major macOS system upgrades.
  • OBEXAgent, a server that handles Bluetooth access.
  • ODSAgent, a server that handles remote disk access.[87]
  • OSDUIHelper, a daemon that displays on-screen graphics when certain settings, such as volume or display brightness, or adjusted.
  • PIPAgent, which manages the picture-in-picture feature available in macOS Sierra and later.
  • Photo Library Migration Utility, which can migrate iPhoto and Aperture libraries to Photos.
  • PowerChime, present on some MacBook models, plays a chime when the notebook is plugged in to power.[88]
  • ReportPanic, an app that displays a window when the system reboots from a kernel panic; it allows the user to send a report to Apple.[89]
  • screencaptureui, a daemon responsible for drawing the user interface shown when taking a screenshot.
  • ScreenSaverEngine, the process that handles screen saver access. When invoked, it will display the screensaver.
  • SystemUIServer, a daemon that manages status items in the menu bar.
  • ThermalTrap, a daemon which notifies users when the system temperature exceeds a usable limit.
  • Ticket Viewer, an app that displays Kerberos tickets.
  • UnmountAssistantAgent, which displays a dialog if there is a process preventing ejection of a disk and offers to forcibly eject the disk if the process cannot be quit.
  • Wireless Diagnostics, an app that launches when W-Fi connectivity problems are detected.

Older applications

Classic

 
JPEGView running in the Classic Environment

The Classic Environment, usually referred to as Classic, is a hardware and software abstraction layer in PowerPC versions of Mac OS X that allows most legacy applications compatible with Mac OS 9 to run on Mac OS X. The name "Classic" is also sometimes used by software vendors to refer to the application programming interface available to "classic" applications, to differentiate between programming for Mac OS X and the classic version of the Mac OS.

The Classic Environment is supported on PowerPC-based Macintosh computers running versions of Mac OS X up to 10.4 "Tiger", but not with 10.5 "Leopard" or Macintoshes utilizing any other architecture than PowerPC.

The Classic Environment is a descendant of Rhapsody's "Blue Box" virtualization layer, which served as a proof of concept. (Previously, Apple A/UX also offered a virtualized Mac OS environment on top of a UNIX operating system.) It uses a Mac OS 9 System Folder, and a New World ROM file to bridge the differences between the older PowerPC Macintosh platforms and the XNU kernel environment. The Classic Environment was created as a key element of Apple's strategy to replace the classic Mac OS (versions 9 and below) with Mac OS X as the standard operating system (OS) used by Macintosh computers by eliminating the need to use the older OS directly.

The Classic Environment can be loaded at login (for faster activation when needed later), on command, or whenever a Mac OS application that requires it is launched (to reduce the use of system resources when not needed). It requires a full version of Mac OS 9 to be installed on the system, and loads an instance of that OS in a sandbox environment, replacing some low-level system calls with equivalent calls to Mac OS X via updated system files and the Classic Support system enabler. This sandbox is used to launch all "classic" Mac OS applications—there is only one instance of the Classic process running for a given user, and only one user per machine may be running Classic at a time.

If the user chooses to launch the Classic Environment only when needed, launching a "classic" application first launches the Classic Environment, which can be configured to appear in a window resembling the display of a computer booting into Mac OS 9. When the Classic Environment has finished loading, the application launches. When a "classic" application is in the foreground, the menu bar at the top of the screen changes to look like the older Mac OS system menu. Dialog boxes and other user-interface elements retain their traditional appearance.

The Classic Environment provides a way to run "Classic" applications on Apple's G5 systems as well as on most G4 based computers sold after January 2003. These machines cannot boot Mac OS 9 or earlier without the bridging capabilities of the Classic Environment or other software (see SheepShaver).

The Classic Environment's compatibility is usually sufficient for many applications, provided the application using it does not require direct access to hardware or engage in full-screen drawing. However, it is not a complete clone of Mac OS 9. The Finder included with Mac OS X v10.2 and later does not support the "Reveal Object" Apple events used by some Mac OS 9 applications, causing the "Reveal In Finder" functionality for those applications to be lost. Early releases of Mac OS X would often fail to draw window frames of Classic applications correctly, and after the Classic Environment's windowing was made double buffered in Mac OS X Panther, some older applications and games sometimes failed to update the screen properly, such as the original Macintosh port of Doom. However, the Classic Environment "resurrected" some older applications that had previously been unusable on the Macintosh Quadra and Power Macintosh series; this is because Mac OS X replaced Mac OS 9's virtual memory system with a more standard and less fragile implementation.

The Classic Environment's performance is also generally acceptable, with a few exceptions. Most of an application is run directly as PowerPC code (which would not be possible on Intel-based Macs). Motorola 68k code is handled by the same Motorola 68LC040 emulator that Mac OS 9 uses. Some application functions are actually faster in the Classic Environment than under Mac OS 9 on equivalent hardware, due to performance improvements in the newer operating system's device drivers. These applications are largely those that use heavy disk processing, and were often quickly ported to Mac OS X by their developers. On the other hand, applications that rely on heavy processing and which did not share resources under Mac OS 9's co-operative multitasking model will be interrupted by other (non-Classic) processes under Mac OS X's preemptive multitasking. The greater processing power of most systems that run Mac OS X (compared to systems intended to run Mac OS 8 or 9) helps to mitigate the performance degradation of the Classic Environment's virtualization.

Dashboard

Dashboard is an application for Apple Inc.'s macOS operating systems, used as a secondary desktop for hosting mini-applications known as widgets. These are intended to be simple applications that do not take time to launch. Dashboard applications supplied with macOS include a stock ticker, weather report, calculator and notepad; users can create or download their own. Before Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, when Dashboard is activated, the user's desktop is dimmed and widgets appear in the foreground. Like application windows, they can be moved around, rearranged, deleted, and recreated (so that more than one of the same Widget is open at the same time, possibly with different settings). New widgets can be opened, via an icon bar on the bottom of the layer, loading a list of available apps similar to the iOS homescreen or the macOS Launchpad. After loading, the widget is ready for use.

Dashboard was first introduced in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger.[90][91][92] It can be activated as an application, from the Dock, Launchpad or Spotlight. It can also be accessed by a dashboard key.[93] Alternatively, the user can choose to make Dashboard open on moving the cursor into a preassigned hot corner or keyboard shortcut. Starting with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, the Dashboard can be configured as a space, accessed by swiping four fingers to the right from the Desktops either side of it. In OS X 10.10 Yosemite, the Dashboard is disabled by default, as the Notification Center is now the primary method of displaying widgets.

Dashboard was removed in macOS Catalina.[94]

Grab

 
Grab 1.10 running on macOS High Sierra

Grab was a built-in utility for taking screenshots. It supported capturing a marquee selection, a whole window, or the whole screen, as well as timed screenshots. The program originated from NeXTSTEP, and was replaced by the Screenshot utility in macOS Mojave. Grab saved screenshots in the TIFF format. It was also possible to save screenshots in PDF format (earlier versions of macOS) or PNG format (later versions).

iDVD

iDVD is a discontinued DVD-creation application.

Internet Connect

The Internet Connect program in Mac OS X allows the user to activate dial-up connections to the Internet via an ISP or VPN. It also provides a simple way to connect to an AirPort Network. Up to the latest version of Mac OS X 10.4, the Internet Connect application provides more general tools than the more detailed Network pane in System Settings, which allows the user to configure and control systemwide network settings. However, as of Mac OS X 10.5, Internet Connect's functions have been incorporated into the Network pane of System Settings, and the application is no longer included.

Use of Internet Connect is generally not necessary if the Macintosh is connected to the internet through an Ethernet device to DSL or cable internet service, except to manage connections to any subordinate bluetooth equipment.

iSync

 
iSync 3 running on Mac OS X Leopard

iSync was a tool made to sync iCal and Address Book data to a SyncML-enabled mobile phone, via Bluetooth or by using a USB connection. It was released on Jan 2, 2003, with technology licensed from fusionOne. Support for many (pre-October 2007) devices was built-in,[95] with newer devices being supported via manufacturer and third-party iSync Plugins. Support for Palm OS organizers and compatible smartphones was removed with the release of iSync 3.1 and Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. BlackBerry OS, Palm OS, and Windows Mobile (Pocket PC) devices could not be used with iSync, but were supported by third-party applications. Before the release of Mac OS X 10.4, iSync also synchronized a user's Safari bookmarks with the then usable .Mac subscription service provided by Apple.

iTunes

iTunes is a media player, media library, Internet radio broadcaster, mobile device management utility, and the client app for iTunes Store. It is used to purchase, play, download, and organize digital multimedia, on personal computers running the macOS and Windows operating systems. iTunes is developed by Apple Inc. It was announced on January 9, 2001.

Because iTunes was criticized for having a bloated user experience, Apple decided to split iTunes into separate apps as of macOS Catalina: Apple Music, Apple Podcasts, and Apple TV. Finder would take over the device management aspect that iTunes previously served.[96][97] This change would not affect Windows or older macOS versions.[98]

Network Utility

Network Utility was an application for macOS up to MacOS Catalina that provided a variety of tools that could be used related to computer network information gathering and analysis. Starting with macOS Big Sur the application is no longer included and was replaced with a message that it has been deprecated.[99][100] Starting with macOS Ventura, the application is removed from the OS.

Network Utility showed information about each of your network connections, including the MAC address of the interface, the IP address assigned to it, its speed and status, a count of data packets sent and received, and a count of transmission errors and collisions. It also provided a GUI to the netstat, ping, traceroute, whois, finger, and stroke UNIX programs.

ODBC Administrator

 
ODBC Administrator 1.1.0 running on Mac OS X Leopard

ODBC Administrator was a 32-bit utility in the Mac OS X operating system for administering ODBC, which enables interaction with ODBC-compliant data sources. Features included connection pooling, trace log creation, and ODBC driver management, among other administration features.

Although Apple started including the underlying iODBC libraries in Mac OS X Jaguar,[101] and continued to do so through at least macOS Big Sur,[102] Apple only included their ODBC Administrator through Mac OS X Leopard, and temporarily made it available as a separate download (since removed) for Snow Leopard.

Alternatives to Apple's 32-bit ODBC Administrator include the free and open source 32-bit and 64-bit iODBC Administrator included with the iODBC SDK, which is available for all extant versions of Mac OS X (10.0.x through 11.2.x).[103]

Remote Install Mac OS X

 
A screenshot of the Remote Install program

Remote Install Mac OS X was a remote installer for use with MacBook Air laptops over the network. It could run on a Mac or a Windows PC with an optical drive. A client MacBook Air (lacking an optical drive) could then wirelessly connect to the other Mac or PC to perform system software installs.

Remote Install Mac OS X was released as part of Mac OS X 10.5.2 on February 12, 2008. Support for the Mac mini was added in March 2009, allowing the DVD drive to be replaced with a second hard drive.

With the launch of Mac OS X Lion, Apple has omitted Remote Install.[104][105] A workaround is to enable Target Disk Mode.

Sherlock

Sherlock, named after fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, is a file and web search tool created by Apple Inc. for the PowerPC-based "classic" Mac OS, introduced with Mac OS 8 as an extension of the Mac OS Finder's file searching capabilities. Like its predecessor (System 7.5's totally revamped 'Find File' app, adapted by Bill Monk from his 'Find Pro' shareware find program[1]), Sherlock searches for local files and file contents, using the same basic indexing code and search logic found in AppleSearch. Sherlock extended the system by enabling the user to search for items through the World Wide Web through a set of plugins which employed existing web search engines. These plugins were written as plain text files, so that it was a simple task for a user to write a Sherlock plugin. Since most of the standard plug-ins for Sherlock provided by Apple itself no longer function, it was officially retired and removed in the release of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard in 2007.

Software Update

In Mac OS 9 and early versions of Mac OS X, Software Update was a standalone tool. The program was part of the CoreServices in OS X. It could automatically inform users of new updates (with new features and bug and security fixes) to the operating system, applications, device drivers, and firmware. All updates required the user to enter their administrative password and some required a system restart. It could be set to check for updates daily, weekly, monthly, or not at all; in addition, it could download and store the associated .pkg file (the same type used by Installer) to be installed at a later date, and it maintained a history of installed updates. Starting with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, updates that required a reboot logged out the user prior to installation and automatically restarted the computer when complete. In earlier versions of OS X, the updates were installed, but critical files were not replaced until the next system startup.

Beginning with OS X 10.8, Software Update became part of the App Store application. Beginning with macOS Mojave (10.14), it became a part of System preferences.

X11

In Mac OS X Tiger, X11 was an optional install included on the install DVD. Mac OS X Leopard, Snow Leopard and Lion installed X11 by default, but from OS X Mountain Lion (10.8), Apple dropped dedicated support for X11, with users directed to the open source XQuartz project (to which it contributes) instead.[106]

Development tools

Server technology

Core components

Notes

  1. ^ Mac OS Classic legacy disk image format supported by DiskImageMounter under Mac OS X versions 10.3—10.6.[65] As of version 10.9, hdiutil can still convert these formats but unable to open or write them, and version 11.0 removed all support.

References

  1. ^ a b Darren Murph (December 6, 2010). "Apple Mac App Store: open for business starting January 6th". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved December 16, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Muchmore, Michael (January 6, 2011). "Apple's Mac App Store: Hands On". PC Magazine. PC Magazine. Retrieved January 6, 2011.
  3. ^ AppleInsider Staff (October 20, 2010). "Apple's new Mac App Store coming to Snow Leopard within 90 days". AppleInsider.com. Retrieved October 31, 2010.
  4. ^ Mac App Store Review (November 3, 2010). . MacAppStoreReview.com. Archived from the original on November 9, 2010. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  5. ^ "Mac App Store Downloads Top One Million in First Day" (Press release). Apple Inc. January 7, 2011. Retrieved January 10, 2011.
  6. ^ Shimpi, Anand Lal. "Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger Review". Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  7. ^ Isaacson, Walter (2011). Steve Jobs. Simon & Schuster. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-4516-4853-9.
  8. ^ Jason Snell (October 16, 2014). "OS X Yosemite: New Notification Center finally gives widgets their due". Macworld.
  9. ^ "Use Spotlight as a Calculator". OS X Daily. 4 November 2009. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  10. ^ a b "Apple Chess README". Apple Inc. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  11. ^ "Source code of the latest version". Apple Inc. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  12. ^ "Dictionary User Guide for Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  13. ^ Clover, Juli. "Apple Releases macOS Catalina With Find My, Screen Time, and No More iTunes". www.macrumors.com. Retrieved 2019-11-07.
  14. ^ Siracusa, John (20 July 2011). "Mac OS X 10.7 Lion: the Ars Technica review". arstechnica.com. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  15. ^ "Take a photo or record a video in Photo Booth on Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
  16. ^ "Photo Booth User Guide for Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
  17. ^ Klosowski, Thorin (April 8, 2015). "OS X 10.10.3 Arrives with New Photos App". Lifehacker. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  18. ^ Simmons, Dan (April 8, 2015). "Apple releases Mac app to store photos in iCloud". BBC News. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  19. ^ . Apple. Archived from the original on April 9, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  20. ^ "The demise of Apple's Aperture and iPhoto: What does it mean for you?". The Next Web. June 27, 2014. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  21. ^ Panzarino, Matthew (June 27, 2014). "Apple To Cease Development Of Aperture And Transition Users To Photos For OS X". TechCrunch. AOL. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  22. ^ "Open and play a file in QuickTime Player on Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
  23. ^ "WebKit". WebKit. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  24. ^ "Back up your Mac with Time Machine". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  25. ^ "Back up your files with Time Machine on Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  26. ^ "Use the Voice Memos app". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
  27. ^ "Voice Memos User Guide for Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
  28. ^ "Using Activity Monitor to read System Memory and determine how much RAM is being used". Apple. February 21, 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  29. ^ Chung, Jackson (September 10, 2008). "Macnifying OS X: Learning To Utilize Activity Monitor on Mac". MakeUseOf. MakeUseOf. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  30. ^ spiff (October 28, 2003). "10.3: View all processes from a hierarchical perspective". Mac OS X Hints.
  31. ^ Brad Miser (2004). Special Edition Using Mac OS X, V10.3 Panther. Que Publishing. p. 926. ISBN 978-0-7897-3075-6.
  32. ^ Topher Kessler (October 29, 2013). "Activity Monitor in OS X Mavericks brings significant changes". CNET.
  33. ^ "What is Airport Utility?". Switch to a Mac. June 15, 2009. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  34. ^ "Apple – Support – Downloads". support.apple.com. Retrieved Jun 22, 2020.
  35. ^ "Airport Utility 5.6.1 for Windows". Apple Support. Apple. June 11, 2012. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  36. ^ "AirPort Utility for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad on the iTunes App Store". iTunes Preview. Apple. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  37. ^ a b John Martellaro (February 3, 2012). "AirPort Utility 6 for Lion is for Beginners". The Mac Observer. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  38. ^ Topher Kessler (January 31, 2012). "AirPort Utility 6.0 missing a number of features". CNET. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  39. ^ "How to install AirPort Utility 5.6.1 on Mountain Lion". Retrieved December 10, 2012.
  40. ^ "Share files between your Mac and Bluetooth devices". Apple Support. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
  41. ^ "Boot Camp – Apple Support". support.apple.com. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
  42. ^ "Mac OS X Panther Applications and Utilities".
  43. ^ . Mac Guides on MacRumors. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017.
  44. ^ "Tracking down trouble with the Console". Macworld. Nov 28, 2007. Retrieved Jun 22, 2020.
  45. ^ a b "OSX Log Files".
  46. ^ How To Use Console.
  47. ^ "How to use the system console in OS X". MacIssues. March 23, 2014.
  48. ^ "About Windows Migration Assistant".
  49. ^ "Take a screenshot on your Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  50. ^ "Take screenshots or screen recordings on Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  51. ^ Sande, Steven (April 6, 2011). "Mac OS X 10.7 Lion features new System Information app". The Unofficial Apple Weblog. Retrieved September 22, 2013.
  52. ^ Etherington, Darrell (August 11, 2011). "Lion 101: How to know more about your Mac". GigaOM. Retrieved September 22, 2013.
  53. ^ "How to Find Comprehensive Mac System Info via Terminal". OSXDaily. 2 February 2022. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  54. ^ . Apple Inc. Archived from the original on May 10, 2013.
  55. ^ Wünschiers, Röbbe (2004-01-01). Computational Biology: Unix/Linux, data processing and programming : with 19 figures and 12 tables. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9783540211426.
  56. ^ "Use zsh as the default shell on your Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
  57. ^ a b McElhearn, Kirk (2006-12-26). The Mac OS X Command Line: Unix Under the Hood. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470113851.
  58. ^ Kissell, Joe (2009-01-01). Take Control of the Mac Command Line with Terminal. TidBITS Publishing, Inc. ISBN 9781933671550.
  59. ^ "Chapter 1. Introducing VoiceOver". www.apple.com. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  60. ^ "Vision Accessibility – Mac". Apple. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  61. ^ "Use Control Center on your Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
  62. ^ McElhearn, Kirk (April 30, 2012). "Beyond .zip: Secrets of the Archive Utility". Macworld. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  63. ^ Sandro Cuccla (October 27, 2012). "How to Use & Customize OS X's Built-in Archive Utility App". The Mac Observer. Retrieved November 25, 2013.
  64. ^ "Technical Note TN2123: CrashReporter". Apple Inc. April 1, 2008.
  65. ^ a b "hdiutil(1) Mac OS X Manual Page". Apple Inc. from the original on 2014-06-25. Retrieved 2014-09-03.
  66. ^ a b /System/Library/CoreServices/DiskImageMounter.app/Contents/Info.plist
  67. ^ DVD Player 4.6 release notes
  68. ^ Alderman, Nathan. "Best apps for playing Blu-rays on your Mac in 2020". iMore. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  69. ^ "Intro to Feedback Assistant on Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  70. ^ Griffiths, Rob (October 27, 2008). "Leopard's year old annoyances". Macworld. from the original on January 9, 2009. Retrieved December 7, 2008.
  71. ^ Griffiths, Rob (June 8, 2008). "Put 10.5's help windows in the background". Macworld. from the original on December 26, 2008. Retrieved December 7, 2008.
  72. ^ Holt, Melissa (July 26, 2017). "macOS: Use Terminal to Send Help Viewer to the Back". The Mac Observer.
  73. ^ "Software Delivery Guide – Specifying Install Operations". Apple. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  74. ^ "Software Delivery Guide". Apple. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  75. ^ "The Flat Package". MacTech. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  76. ^ "OSX legacy packaging redux". Matthew Brett. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  77. ^ "XAR NEW MacOS X 10.5 package format". MacGeekBlog. December 30, 2006. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  78. ^ "The loginwindow Process | Apple Training Series: Mac OS X Support Essentials v10.6: A Guide to Supporting and Troubleshooting Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard". flylib.com. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  79. ^ . 2019-11-21. Archived from the original on 2019-11-21. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  80. ^ "How to Log Out Another User Without Logging In On Mac OS X". OS X Daily. 2015-08-17. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  81. ^ "Share the screen of another Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-07.
  82. ^ Whittaker, Zack (February 16, 2012). "OS X 'Mountain Lion' unifies software update into Mac App Store". ZDNet.
  83. ^ "Find the model and serial number of your Mac". Apple Support. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  84. ^ "corelocationagent(8) [mojave man page]". www.unix.com. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
  85. ^ "How to Install Command Line Tools in Mac OS X (Without Xcode)". OS X Daily. 2014-02-12. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
  86. ^ "managedclient(8) [mojave man page]". www.unix.com. Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  87. ^ Edge, Charles S.; Barker, William; Hunter, Beau; Sullivan, Gene (31 December 2010). Enterprise Mac Security: Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Apress. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-4302-2731-1.
  88. ^ "Turning On Or Off the MacBook Power Chime". MacMost.com. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  89. ^ ReportPanic(8) – Darwin and macOS System Manager's Manual
  90. ^ "How to create your own OS X Dashboard Widgets from Safari – Make Tech Easier". Make Tech Easier. 2010-07-26. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
  91. ^ Haslam, Karen. "Yosemite review: Continuity and WiFi problems mar an otherwise pleasing update". Macworld UK. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
  92. ^ Udell, Sterling (2010-04-06). Pro Web Gadgets for Mobile and Desktop. Apress. ISBN 9781430225522.
  93. ^ Hattersley, Lucy. "3 ways to Mac Dashboard useful again: games, entertainment and fresh new productivity widgets". Macworld UK. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
  94. ^ Statt, Nick (June 4, 2019). "Apple will permanently remove Dashboard in macOS Catalina". The Verge. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  95. ^ . Archived from the original on November 8, 2008.
  96. ^ Carman, Ashley (2019-06-03). "Apple breaks up iTunes, creates separate Podcasts, TV, and Music apps for macOS". The Verge. Retrieved 2019-06-03.
  97. ^ Roettgers, Janko (2019-06-03). "Apple Is Officially Killing iTunes, Replacing It With Three Dedicated Media Apps". Variety. Retrieved 2019-06-03.
  98. ^ Spangler, Todd (2019-06-03). "Apple's iTunes Store, iTunes App for Windows Aren't Going Away". Variety. Retrieved 2019-06-03.
  99. ^ "Network Utility Deprecated in macOS Big Sur". macrumors.com. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  100. ^ "macOS 11.0 Big Sur: The Ars Technica review". arstechnica.com. November 12, 2020. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  101. ^ Open Source Software in Mac OS X Jaguar (10.2.1)
  102. ^ Open Source Software in macOS Big Sur (11.2.0)
  103. ^ iODBC SDK Downloads
  104. ^ "Reinstalling software using Remote Install Mac OS X v10.5 and v10.6". Apple Inc. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
  105. ^ "Where is the "Remote Install Mac OS X" utility?". Apple Support Community. Retrieved August 3, 2011.
  106. ^ "Apple Removes X11 in OS X Mountain Lion, Shifts Support to Open Source XQuartz". Retrieved 2016-09-14.

list, macos, built, apps, this, list, macos, built, apps, system, components, contents, applications, store, automator, books, calculator, calendar, chess, contacts, dictionary, facetime, find, font, book, home, image, capture, launchpad, mail, maps, messages,. This is a list of macOS built in apps and system components Contents 1 Applications 1 1 App Store 1 2 Automator 1 3 Books 1 4 Calculator 1 5 Calendar 1 6 Chess 1 7 Contacts 1 8 Dictionary 1 9 FaceTime 1 10 Find My 1 11 Font Book 1 12 Home 1 13 Image Capture 1 14 Launchpad 1 15 Mail 1 16 Maps 1 17 Messages 1 18 Mission Control 1 19 Music 1 20 News 1 21 Notes 1 22 Photo Booth 1 23 Photos 1 24 Podcasts 1 25 Preview 1 26 QuickTime Player 1 27 Reminders 1 28 Safari 1 29 Shortcuts 1 30 Siri 1 31 Stickies 1 32 Stocks 1 33 System Settings 1 34 TV 1 35 TextEdit 1 36 Time Machine 1 37 Voice Memos 2 Utilities 2 1 Activity Monitor 2 2 AirPort Utility 2 3 Audio MIDI Setup 2 4 Bluetooth File Exchange 2 5 Boot Camp Assistant 2 6 ColorSync Utility 2 6 1 ColorSync 2 7 Console 2 8 Digital Color Meter 2 9 Disk Utility 2 10 Grapher 2 11 Keychain Access 2 12 Migration Assistant 2 13 Screenshot 2 14 Script Editor 2 15 System Information 2 16 Terminal 2 17 VoiceOver Utility 3 Features 3 1 Control Center 3 2 Dock 3 3 Finder 3 4 Notification Center 3 5 Spotlight 4 Accessibility 4 1 Dwell Control 4 2 VoiceOver 5 System components 5 1 Archive Utility 5 2 Crash Reporter 5 3 DiskImageMounter 5 4 Directory Utility 5 5 DVD Player 5 6 Expansion Slot Utility 5 7 Feedback Assistant 5 8 HelpViewer 5 9 iOS App Installer 5 10 Installer 5 11 loginwindow 5 12 Screen Sharing 5 13 Software Update 5 14 Other 6 Older applications 6 1 Classic 6 2 Dashboard 6 3 Grab 6 4 iDVD 6 5 Internet Connect 6 6 iSync 6 7 iTunes 6 8 Network Utility 6 9 ODBC Administrator 6 10 Remote Install Mac OS X 6 11 Sherlock 6 12 Software Update 6 13 X11 7 Development tools 8 Server technology 9 Core components 10 Notes 11 ReferencesApplications EditApp Store Edit Main article Mac App Store The Mac App Store is macOS s digital distribution platform for macOS apps created and maintained by Apple Inc based on the iOS version the platform was announced on October 20 2010 at Apple s Back to the Mac event 1 2 3 First launched on January 6 2011 as part of the free Mac OS X 10 6 6 update for all current Snow Leopard users 1 2 Apple began accepting app submissions from registered developers on November 3 2010 in preparation for its launch 4 After 24 hours of release Apple announced that there were over one million downloads 5 Automator Edit Main article Automator macOS Automator is an app used to create workflows for automating repetitive tasks into batches for quicker alteration via point and click or drag and drop This saves time and effort over human intervention to manually change each file separately Automator enables the repetition of tasks across a wide variety of programs including Finder Safari Calendar Contacts and others It can also work with third party applications such as Microsoft Office Adobe Photoshop or Pixelmator The icon features a robot holding a pipe a reference to pipelines a computer science term for connected data workflows Automator was first released with Mac OS X Tiger 10 4 6 Books Edit Main article Apple Books Apple Books was first released in OS X Mavericks Calculator Edit Main article Calculator Apple Calculator is a basic calculator application made by Apple Inc and bundled with macOS It has three modes basic scientific and programmer Basic includes a number pad buttons for adding subtracting multiplying and dividing as well as memory keys Scientific mode supports exponents and trigonometric functions and programmer mode gives the user access to more options related to computer programming The Calculator program has a long history going back to the very beginning of the Macintosh platform where a simple four function calculator program was a standard desk accessory from the earliest system versions Though no higher math capability was included third party developers provided upgrades and Apple released the Graphing Calculator application with the first PowerPC release 7 1 2 of the Mac OS and it was a standard component through Mac OS 9 Apple currently ships a different application called Grapher Calculator has Reverse Polish notation support and can also speak the buttons pressed and result returned The Calculator appeared first as a desk accessory in first version of Macintosh System for the 1984 Macintosh 128k Its original incarnation was developed by Chris Espinosa and its appearance was designed in part by Steve Jobs when Espinosa flustered by Jobs s dissatisfaction with all of his prototype designs conceived an application called The Steve Jobs Roll Your Own Calculator Construction Set that allowed Jobs to tailor the look of the calculator to his liking Its design was maintained with the same basic math operations until the final release of classic Mac OS in 2002 7 A Dashboard Calculator widget is included in all versions of macOS from Mac OS X Tiger onwards It only has the basic mode of its desktop counterpart Since the release of OS X Yosemite there is also a simple calculator widget available in the notifications area 8 Since the release of Mac OS X Leopard simple arithmetic functions can be calculated from Spotlight feature 9 They include the standard addition subtraction division multiplication exponentiation and the use of the percent sign to denote percentage Calendar Edit Main article Calendar Apple Calendar is a personal calendar app made by Apple Inc that runs on both the macOS desktop operating system and the iOS mobile operating system It offers online cloud backup of calendars using Apple s iCloud service or can synchronize with other calendar services including Google Calendar and Microsoft Exchange Server Chess Edit Screenshot of Apple Chess Apple Chess is a 3D chess game for macOS developed by Apple Inc as a fork of GNOME Chess formerly glChess 10 Its history dates back to OpenStep and Mac OS X 10 2 It supports chess variants such as crazyhouse and suicide chess Apple redistributes the source code under its own Apple Sample Code License after a special permission has been granted from the original authors of GNOME Chess which is licensed under GPL3 11 10 Apple ships with the game also the Sjeng chess engine GPL Contacts Edit Main article Contacts Apple Contacts called Address Book before OS X Mountain Lion is a computerized address book included with Apple Inc s macOS It includes various synchronizing capabilities and integrates with other macOS applications and features Dictionary Edit Main article Dictionary software Dictionary is an application that includes an in built dictionary and thesaurus 12 FaceTime Edit Main article FaceTime FaceTime is a video calling app released by Apple to replace iChat on Mac Find My Edit Main article Find My First available in macOS Catalina it tracks location of compatible devices connected via iCloud 13 Font Book Edit Main article Font Book Home Edit Main article HomeKit Home is the front end for Apple s HomeKit software framework providing integration with other smart devices Image Capture Edit Image Capture on macOS Big Sur Image Capture is an application program from Apple that enables users to upload pictures from digital cameras or scanners which are either connected directly to the computer or the network It provides no organizational tools like iPhoto but is useful for collating pictures from a variety of sources with no need for drivers Image Capture is scriptable with AppleScript and may be manipulated with Tiger s Automator application As of Tiger Image Capture s AppleScript dictionary does not open in Script Editor As of Snow Leopard only the Image Capture Web Server opens in Script Editor Launchpad Edit Launchpad as seen in macOS Ventura Launchpad is an application launcher that was first introduced in OS X Lion It displays all applications installed on the user s machine in a grid of icons which can be put into folders Launchpad provides an alternative way to start applications in macOS in addition to other options such as the Dock Finder and Spotlight search Launchpad can be used to uninstall apps that came from the Mac App Store 14 Mail Edit Main article Apple Mail Maps Edit Main article Apple Maps Apple Maps is a map service released by Apple Messages Edit Main article Messages Apple Messages was released to replace iChat on Mac Mission Control Edit Main article Mission Control macOS Music Edit Main article Music software News Edit Main article Apple News Apple News is a digital news platform released by Apple Notes Edit Main article Notes Apple Notes is macOS s notetaking app It had first been introduced to macOS starting with OS X Mountain Lion after first being developed for iOS It serves as a local note taking application as well as allowing sharing via iCloud or other cloud services Photo Booth Edit Main article Photo Booth Photo Booth is a camera application for macOS It utilizes the front iSight camera to take pictures and videos 15 16 Photos Edit Main article Photos Apple Photos is a photo management and editing application that was designed based on the in built app released for iOS 8 On macOS Photos was first introduced to OS X Yosemite users in the 10 10 3 update on April 8 2015 17 18 19 replacing iPhoto 20 21 Podcasts Edit Main article Apple Podcasts Preview Edit Main article Preview macOS QuickTime Player Edit Main article QuickTime The QuickTime player is an application that can play video and sound files 22 Reminders Edit Main article Reminders Apple Task managing app introduced to OS X 10 8 Mountain Lion and iOS 5 Safari Edit Main article Safari web browser Safari is the default web browser included with macOS since version 10 3 Panther where it replaces Internet Explorer for Mac OS X It uses the WebKit browser engine 23 Shortcuts Edit Main article Shortcuts app Shortcuts is a visual scripting application Siri Edit Main article Siri Introduced in macOS 10 12 Siri is a digital assistant that allows the user to interact with it to ask questions make recommendations and perform actions on the device It had been previously included in iOS Stickies Edit Main article Stickies Apple Stocks Edit Stocks is an application that provides information regarding stocks of various companies around the world System Settings Edit Main article System Settings TV Edit Main article Apple TV app TextEdit Edit Main article TextEdit Time Machine Edit Main article Time Machine macOS Time Machine is an application where the user can back up their files 24 25 Voice Memos Edit Voice Memos introduced in macOS Mojave 26 is a basic application with the capability of recording audio In addition to this it allows several editing functions such as trimming and overwriting 27 Utilities EditActivity Monitor Edit Activity monitor redirects here For the fitness device see Activity tracker For the generic system component see System monitor Activity Monitor is a system monitor for the macOS operating system which also incorporates task manager functionality 28 29 Activity Monitor appeared in Mac OS X v10 3 when it subsumed the functionality of the programs Process Viewer a task manager and CPU Monitor found in the previous version of OS X 30 31 In OS X 10 9 Activity Monitor was significantly revamped and gained a fifth tab for energy in addition to CPU memory disk and network 32 AirPort Utility Edit AirPort Utility is a program that allows users to configure an AirPort wireless network and manage services associated with and devices connected to AirPort Routers It comes pre installed on macOS and is available to download for Microsoft Windows and iOS AirPort Utility is unique in that it offers network configuration in a native application as opposed to a web application It provides a graphical overview of AirPort devices attached to a network and provides tools to manage each one individually It allows users to configure their network preferences assign Back to My Mac accounts to the network and configure USB attached Printers and hard drives 33 The current versions are 6 3 6 for recent versions of macOS 5 6 1 for Microsoft Windows and older versions 34 of Mac OS X 35 and 1 3 4 for iOS 36 On January 30 2013 Apple released AirPort Utility 6 0 for macOS featuring a redesign of the user interface focused on increasing usability for novice users 37 Reception was mixed with some media outlets reporting IT professionals and network administrators being frustrated over some removed features 37 It was reported that most end users however wouldn t notice the feature omissions 38 Users requiring the removed features can still access the previous version of AirPort Utility using a workaround 39 Audio MIDI Setup Edit The Audio MIDI Setup utility is a program that comes with the macOS operating system for adjusting the computer s audio input and output configuration settings and managing MIDI devices It was first introduced in Mac OS X 10 5 Leopard as a simplified way to configure MIDI Devices Users need to be aware that prior to this release MIDI devices did not require this step and it mention of it might be omitted from MIDI devices from third party manufactures Bluetooth File Exchange Edit Bluetooth File Exchange is a utility that comes with the macOS operating system used to exchange files to or from a Bluetooth enabled device 40 For example it could be used to send an image to a cellphone or to receive an image or other documents from a PDA Boot Camp Assistant Edit Main article Boot Camp software Boot Camp Assistant assists users with installing Windows on their Mac using Boot Camp 41 It does not support Macs with Apple silicon processors as Windows 10 does not have a commercial version of Windows 10 that runs on ARM based processors ColorSync Utility Edit ColorSync Utility is a macOS application used for management of color profiles and filters used in Apple s PDF workflows or applying filters to PDF documents The interface is composed of two parts the document browser and the utility window The document browser allows the user to zoom in and out of an image or apply a Filter to it The utility window has several options including Profile First Aid Profiles Devices Filters and Calculator Profile First Aid allows the user to repair ColorSync color profiles so they conform to the International Color Consortium specification Profiles allows the user to browse the profiles installed on the system grouped by location class or space and graphically compare any two profiles The profile map is displayed as a rotatable scalable 3D object and can be plotted in CIELAB CIELUV YXY YUV and CIEXYZ The Devices section allows the user to see a list of all registered ColorSync devices such as displays and printers and see what ColorSync profile is applied to each one It is also possible to override the default setting The Filters section allows the user to build and modify PDF filters that are available to the rest of the operating system Each filter can be set to appear in one of three domains Application PDF Workflows and Printing Filters set to Printing will appear in the drop down menu under the Save as PDF button in the standard Mac OS X print dialog box Filters set to PDF Workflow will appear in the Quartz Filters drop down menu in the ColorSync section of a print dialog box The default filters are Black amp White Blue Tone Create Generic PDFX 3 Document Gray Tone Lightness Decrease Lightness Increase Reduce File Size Sepia ToneUser created filters can have color management image effects PDF retouch domain selection and comments The Color Management section allows assigning a profile choosing a default profile rendering intent converting to a profile or intermediate transform The Intermediate Transform section allows adjustment of brightness tint hue saturation bilevel high pass filter or profile assignment to either grayscale RGB or CMYK or all data in the file This can be applied to either text graphics images or shading Complex filters can be created by stacking multiple effects Any changes made to the PDF file can then be saved as a new PDF file Calculator can convert between RGB CMYK and other color value schemes and features an interactive color picker for identifying a color on the screen duplicating a feature of another bundled utility Digital Color Meter ColorSync Edit ColorSync is Apple Inc s color management API for the Classic Mac OS and macOS Apple developed the original 1 0 version of ColorSync as a Mac only architecture which made it into an operating system release in 1993 In the same year Apple co founded the International Color Consortium ICC to develop a cross platform profile format which became part of ColorSync 2 0 The system Color Management Module CMM was LinoColorCMM which was developed by Linotype Hell AG now part of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG The same CMM was used in Microsoft Windows 2000 and XP under the rubric of Image Color Management ICM citation needed Apple with the help of Adobe had ported ColorSync 2 0 and its SDK to Microsoft Windows With ColorSync 3 0 the Windows version which was initially planned was discontinued ColorSync 4 0 is the latest version introduced in Mac OS X 10 1 To deal with color gamut issues ColorSync provides several different methods of doing color matching For instance perceptual matching tries to preserve as closely as possible the relative relationships between colors even if all the colors must be systematically distorted in order to get them to fit within the gamut of the destination device Because the human eye is more sensitive to color differences rather than absolute colors this method tends to produce the best looking results subjectively speaking for many common uses but there are other methods that work better in some cases This set of rendering intents is part of the ICC system and is available on all systems with ICC As dictated by the ICC system the profile connection space in ColorSync is the CIE XYZ color space All image input and output devices scanners printers displays have to be characterized by providing an ICC profile that defines how their color information is to be interpreted relative to this reference color space This profile might be provided by the device manufacturer but for better quality results it might be generated by performing actual measurements on the device with a colorimeter Thus when an image is scanned on a scanner the image file will include a copy of the scanner s profile to characterize the meaning of its color information Then before the image is sent to an output device a matching process converts the color information at the time of rendering from the source profile that attached to the image to the destination profile that attached to the output device so that the resulting colors print or display as closely as possible to the original image Console Edit Console is a log viewer developed by Apple Inc and included with macOS It allows users to search through all of the system s logged messages and can alert the user when certain types of messages are logged 42 The Console is generally used for troubleshooting when there is a problem with the computer 43 macOS itself as well as any applications that are used send a constant stream of messages to the system in the form of log files The console allows users to read the system logs help find certain ones monitor them and filter their contents 44 Clicking on Show Log List in the toolbar will bring up the Log List The Log List opens a sidebar which shows all of the different logs that the system maintains This list helps in viewing the many different logs maintained in various parts of the system by bringing them all together to one place By clicking on a particular log category all of the logs will be shown 45 The System Log Queries contains all of the logs that have to do with the entire system This includes system logs as well as individual application logs 45 Selecting All Messages gives a live look at your computer s activities updated live This includes all activities from both the system as well as any applications running Logs in this section of the Console are all formatted uniformly They all include a timestamp the name of the process or application and the actual message of the log When the message displayed includes a paperclip icon next to it it means that it is a shortened version of a longer report and clicking the icon will show the complete report 46 In addition to viewing all messages users can also create custom queries with any criteria that they like These custom queries will filter the messages and will also be shown in the All Messages section In order to make a new query choose New System Log Query from the File menu 47 Digital Color Meter Edit Digital Color Meter running under macOS Monterey Digital Color Meter is a utility for measuring and displaying the color values of pixels displayed on the screen of a Macintosh computer The utility presents a window onto the screen which includes a cursor which by default is 1 1 pixel in size The color displayed in that pixel is shown as a color value which may be represented as decimal or hexadecimal RGB triplets CIE 1931 CIE 1976 or CIELAB triplets or a Tristimulus triplet The displayed color could be copied either as a solid color or as the color value which represents it to be used in other applications for instance an RGB triplet may be used in a color specification to be used on a World Wide Web page Disk Utility Edit Main article Disk Utility Grapher Edit Main article Grapher Keychain Access Edit Main article Keychain software Migration Assistant Edit The Migration Assistant icon in macOS Big Sur and later Migration Assistant is a utility by Apple Inc that transfers data user accounts computer settings and apps from one Macintosh computer to another computer or from a full drive backup As of OS X Lion and later it can also migrate contacts calendars and email accounts and other files from Microsoft Windows 48 Migration Assistant can be used during initial setup of a new computer or run manually on a system that has already been set up It may be used multiple times to copy only applications user account s or settings Its primary purpose is to duplicate the contents and configuration of an existing computer user account s on a new one The Migration Assistant does not transfer the operating system of the old computer to the new one Similarly applications and utilities bundled by Apple with the operating system e g Safari are not transferred based on the assumption that the newer machine has the same or newer version already installed However settings for these applications e g bookmarks are transferred Screenshot Edit Available in macOS Mojave 10 14 and above 49 the Screenshot app bundles features such as screen recording and taking screenshots Screenshot is initialized whenever the user presses the keyboard shortcuts Cmd Shift 3 Cmd Shift 4 Cmd Shift 5 or Cmd Shift 6 50 Script Editor Edit Main article AppleScript Editor System Information Edit System Information running on macOS Big Sur System Profiler redirects here For the generic class of programs see system profiler System Information previously known as System Profiler is a software utility derived from field service diagnostics produced by Apple s Service Diagnostic Engineering team at that time located in Apple satellite buildings in Campbell California that was bundled with the classic Mac OS since Mac OS 7 6 under the name Apple System Profiler In Mac OS X 10 0 the first release of macOS it was renamed System Profiler with the release of Mac OS X 10 7 Lion it was again renamed to System Information 51 Other new features in Lion are the ability to look up support information for the user s hardware model as well 52 In OS X Mountain Lion and later versions of macOS users can also access System Information by holding down the option key and System Information will replace About This Mac in the Apple Menu It compiles technical information on all of the installed hardware devices drivers applications system settings system software programs and kernel extensions installed on the host computer It can export this information as plain text RTF or in the plist XML format This information is used to diagnose problems System Profiler can be extremely useful if attempting to diagnose a hardware problem A user can send the information directly to Apple if the user desires It has support for scripting automation through AppleScript and some limited support in Automator System Information can also be accessed by using the system profiler command through macOS s Terminal application 53 Terminal Edit Main article Terminal macOS Terminal 2 11 running the top program under macOS Terminal Terminal app is the terminal emulator included in macOS 54 Terminal originated in NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP the predecessor operating systems of macOS 55 As a terminal emulator the application provides text based access to the operating system in contrast to the mostly graphical nature of the user experience of macOS by providing a command line interface to the operating system when used in conjunction with a Unix shell such as zsh the default shell in macOS Catalina 56 57 The user can choose other shells available with macOS such as the KornShell tcsh and bash 57 58 VoiceOver Utility Edit Main article VoiceOver VoiceOver is an application where the user can listen to spoken descriptions on the computer 59 60 Features EditControl Center Edit Control Center provides access to system controls such as Wi Fi Bluetooth and Sound in a unified interface accessible from the menu bar Some of these controls can be added to the menu bar by dragging them from Control Center Additional components can be added in System Settings 61 Available controls include Wi Fi Bluetooth AirDrop Focus Stage Manager Keyboard Brightness available on Mac notebooks Screen Mirroring Display Sound Now Playing Accessibility Shortcuts Battery available on Mac notebooks Fast User SwitchingDock Edit Main article Dock macOS The Dock is the main method of launching applications on macOS Finder Edit Main article Finder software Finder is the default file manager and graphical interface shell of macOS Notification Center Edit Spotlight in macOS Big Sur Notification Center displays notifications from apps and websites Users access Notification Center by clicking the clock in the menu bar on macOS Big Sur or the Notification Center icon in earlier versions of macOS Notification Center can be customized in System Settings Spotlight Edit Main article Spotlight software Spotlight is macOS s selection based search system used for indexing documents pictures music applications and System Settings within the computer Accessibility EditDwell Control Edit Dwell allows the pointer to be controlled using head or eye tracking technologies A user can also trigger actions by dwelling or holding the pointer still for a specified amount of time which will trigger the programmed dwell actions VoiceOver Edit Main article VoiceOverSystem components EditArchive Utility Edit Archive Utility BOMArchiveHelper until Mac OS X 10 5 is the default archive file handler in macOS It is usually invoked automatically when opening a file in one of its supported formats 62 It can be used to create compressed ZIP archives by choosing Create archive of file Leopard Compress in the Finder s File or contextual menu It is located at System Library CoreServices Applications Archive Utility app in OS X 10 10 and later System Library CoreServices Archive Utility app in 10 5 through 10 9 and System Library CoreServices BOMArchiveHelper app in 10 4 63 Prior to Archive Utility s inclusion in Mac OS X v10 3 beginning with Mac OS 7 6 Apple bundled the freeware StuffIt Expander with the operating system Invoking Archive Utility manually shows a minimal GUI letting the user change Archive Utility preferences or choose files to compress or uncompress BOM is an abbreviation of Bill of Materials Bill of Materials files or bom files are used by the macOS Installer program to document where files in an installer bundle are installed what their file permissions should be and other file metadata Thus a Bill of Materials is read by the Installer and Archive Utility helps it by extracting the files specified in the BOM Crash Reporter Edit Crash Reporter is the standard crash reporter in macOS 64 Crash Reporter can send the crash logs to Apple Inc for their engineers to review Crash Reporter has three modes of operations Basic The default mode Only application crashes are reported and the dialog does not contain any debugging information Developer In addition to application crashes crashes are also displayed for background and system processes Server The default for macOS Server systems No crash reports are shown to the user though they are still logged None Disables the dialog prompt Crash reports are neither displayed nor logged The developer tool CrashReporterPrefs can be used to change modes as can using the terminal command a href Defaults software html title Defaults software defaults a write com apple CrashReporter DialogType basic developer server In basic mode if Crash Reporter notices an application has crashed twice in succession it will offer to rename the application s preference file and try again corrupted preference files being a common cause of crashes citation needed When reporting a crash the top text field of the window has the crash log while the bottom field is for user comments Users may also copy and paste the log into their e mail client to send to a third party application developer for the developer to use DiskImageMounter Edit DiskImageMounter is the utility that handles mounting disk volume images in Mac OS X starting with version 10 3 DiskImageMounter works by either launching a daemon to handle the disk image or by contacting a running daemon and have it mount the disk Like BOMArchiveHelper DiskImageMounter has no GUI when double clicked doing so does nothing The only GUI the program ever displays is a window with a progress bar and mount options cancel or skip verification or an error report if it could not mount the image It is found in System Library CoreServices DiskImageMounter app Starting with version 10 7 Apple removed double click support for images using legacy metadata 65 DiskImageMounter will not be able to open img NDIF only smi self mounting dc42 Disk Copy 4 2 and dart DART disk image formats that was previously supported in version 10 6 and earlier DiskImageMounter supports a variety of disk image file types 66 Apple Disk Image dmg com apple disk image UDIF disk images udif com apple disk image udif UDIF segment devs dmgpart com apple disk image udif segment self mounting image smi com apple disk image smi DVD CD R master image toast dvdr cdr com apple disk image cdr com roxio disk image toast disk image segment dmgpart 66 raw disk image OSTypes devr hdrv DDim com apple disk image raw PC drive container OSTypes OPCD com apple disk image pc ISO image iso public iso image sparse disk image sparseimage com apple disk image sparse sparsebundle As of macOS 11 0 support for the following formats has been removed Disk Copy 4 2 disk image dc42 diskcopy42 com apple disk image dc42 DART disk image dart com apple disk image dart NDIF disk image nb 1 ndif img com apple disk image ndif NDIF disk image segment imgpart com apple disk image ndif segment Directory Utility Edit Directory Utility is a utility included with the macOS previously Mac OS X operating system to configure connections to directory services Prior to Mac OS X 10 5 this tool was named Directory Access Apple s LDAP implementation is called Apple Open Directory DVD Player Edit DVD Player formerly Apple DVD Player is the default DVD player in macOS It supports all the standard DVD features such as multiple audio video amp subtitle tracks as well as Dolby Digital 5 1 passthrough DVD access URLs and closed captions In some instances users can choose which VOB file to open DVD Player is also fully compatible with DVDs authored by DVD Studio Pro and iDVD including HD DVDs by DVD Studio Pro 67 As of macOS Mojave it has been updated to 64 bit sports a new icon and has better Touch Bar support DVD Player complies with most copyright laws and will thus enforce most restrictive measures of DVD technology such as region restrictive encodings and user inhibited operations disabled actions It does this even when using an all region DVD drive It will even force Apple s Grab screen grabbing program to cease functioning through the Finder interface until the DVD Player application is quit effectively preventing the user from taking screen captures of visual DVD content The software does not contain a DTS decoder so DTS tracks cannot be played through the Mac s built in speakers or analog output However DTS tracks can be output to devices that have their own decoder so playback is supported through outputs such as S PDIF DisplayPort and HDMI It has never supported the ability to play Blu Ray discs 68 Expansion Slot Utility Edit Expansion Slot Utility allows manual allocation of PCIe card bandwidth It is only available on certain Mac Pro models Feedback Assistant Edit The Feedback Assistant is made available to customers in the Apple Software Customer Seeding AppleSeed for IT or Apple Beta Software programs and allows a user to manually send feedback reports or requests to Apple 69 HelpViewer Edit Help Viewer running on macOS Monterey Help Viewer is a WebKit based HTML viewer for macOS aimed at displaying help files and other documentation It is found in System Library CoreServices Help Viewer app The default file extension is help Help index files are generated with Help Indexer macOS applications typically use Help Viewer to display their help content rather than a custom system Help Viewer s implementation in Mac OS X 10 5 Leopard found its way to Rob Griffiths list of Leopard criticisms because Apple changed the software from a standalone application with a standard window interface to one with a floating window that always appears in front of all other application windows obscuring the interface for which one is seeking help see image below Although one can close or minimize the Help Viewer window it is difficult to consult the Help Viewer while simultaneously working with the application short of changing the size of windows so both fit on the screen 70 The Help Viewer window also does not work with the Expose window management feature Mission Control in OS X 10 7 or later There is a workaround using the defaults command accessible in the Terminal 71 72 iOS App Installer Edit iOS App Installer is an app that downloads ipa files for iPadOS applications so that they can be run on Apple silicon based Macs Installer Edit Installer 6 2 0 running installation of VirtualBox on macOS Big Sur Installer extracts and installs files out of pkg packages allowing developers to create uniform software installers Installer launches when a package or metapackage file is opened The installation process itself can vary substantially as Installer allows developers to customize the information the user is presented with For example it can be made to display a custom welcome message software license and readme Installer also handles authentication checks that packages are valid before installing them and allows developers to run custom scripts at several points during the installation process 73 Installer packages have the file extension pkg Prior to Mac OS X Leopard installer packages were implemented as Mac OS X packages 74 These packages were a collection of files that resided in folders with a pkg file extension 75 76 In Mac OS X Leopard the software packaging method was changed to use the XAR eXtensible ARchiver file format the directory tree containing the files is packaged as an xar archive file with a pkg extension 77 Instead of distributing multiple files for a package this allowed all of the software files to be contained in a single file for easier distribution with the benefit of package signing loginwindow Edit The loginwindow process displays the macOS login window at system startup if auto login is not set verifies login attempts and launches login applications It also implements the Force Quit window restarts macOS user interface components the Dock and Finder if they crash and handles the logout restart and shutdown routines 78 79 Users are assigned their own loginwindow when they log in if a loginwindow process belonging to a specific user is force quit they will be logged out 80 Screen Sharing Edit Screen Sharing is a utility that may be used to control remote computers and access their files To connect one may enter a VNC or Apple ID and authenticate as a local user on the remote computer or if the computers are linked via the same Apple ID automatically initialise the connection It supports features such as a shared clipboard between the two computers and remotely transferring files The feature must be enabled in the Sharing preference pane in System Settings 81 Software Update Edit Software Update is a section in System Settings for Mac Software Updates as well as updates to core Mac apps starting in macOS Mojave 10 14 it also has an item in the Apple menu From OS X Mountain Lion 10 8 82 to macOS High Sierra 10 13 the Mac App Store was used for Software Updates prior to that Software Update was a separate utility which could be launched from the Apple menu or from the Software Update pane in System Settings Other Edit Other system components include About This Mac which shows information about the Mac it is running on such as the hardware serial number and macOS version 83 Captive Network Assistant a daemon used to access captive portals when connected to public Wi Fi networks Certificate Assistant a utility for creating and verifying digital certificates ControlStrip a daemon that controls the Touch Bar CoreLocationAgent a daemon responsible for displaying authorization prompts to allow apps and widgets to access location services 84 FolderActionsDispatcher a daemon responsible for monitoring changes to the filesystem to run Folder Action scripts Install Command Line Developer Tools a utility that allows developers to easily install Xcode s command line developer tools if Xcode is not installed It can be executed by running xcode select install in the terminal 85 Keychain Circle Notification a daemon involved in iCloud Keychain syncing ManagedClient manages various functions pertaining to managed preferences and configuration profiles 86 Setup Assistant is the application that starts on first boot of a fresh copy of macOS or a new Mac It configures computer accounts Apple ID iCloud and Accessibility settings It is also run after major macOS system upgrades OBEXAgent a server that handles Bluetooth access ODSAgent a server that handles remote disk access 87 OSDUIHelper a daemon that displays on screen graphics when certain settings such as volume or display brightness or adjusted PIPAgent which manages the picture in picture feature available in macOS Sierra and later Photo Library Migration Utility which can migrate iPhoto and Aperture libraries to Photos PowerChime present on some MacBook models plays a chime when the notebook is plugged in to power 88 ReportPanic an app that displays a window when the system reboots from a kernel panic it allows the user to send a report to Apple 89 screencaptureui a daemon responsible for drawing the user interface shown when taking a screenshot ScreenSaverEngine the process that handles screen saver access When invoked it will display the screensaver SystemUIServer a daemon that manages status items in the menu bar ThermalTrap a daemon which notifies users when the system temperature exceeds a usable limit Ticket Viewer an app that displays Kerberos tickets UnmountAssistantAgent which displays a dialog if there is a process preventing ejection of a disk and offers to forcibly eject the disk if the process cannot be quit Wireless Diagnostics an app that launches when W Fi connectivity problems are detected Older applications EditClassic Edit JPEGView running in the Classic Environment MacOS Classic redirects here For the pre Mac OS X operating system for Macs see Classic Mac OS The Classic Environment usually referred to as Classic is a hardware and software abstraction layer in PowerPC versions of Mac OS X that allows most legacy applications compatible with Mac OS 9 to run on Mac OS X The name Classic is also sometimes used by software vendors to refer to the application programming interface available to classic applications to differentiate between programming for Mac OS X and the classic version of the Mac OS The Classic Environment is supported on PowerPC based Macintosh computers running versions of Mac OS X up to 10 4 Tiger but not with 10 5 Leopard or Macintoshes utilizing any other architecture than PowerPC The Classic Environment is a descendant of Rhapsody s Blue Box virtualization layer which served as a proof of concept Previously Apple A UX also offered a virtualized Mac OS environment on top of a UNIX operating system It uses a Mac OS 9 System Folder and a New World ROM file to bridge the differences between the older PowerPC Macintosh platforms and the XNU kernel environment The Classic Environment was created as a key element of Apple s strategy to replace the classic Mac OS versions 9 and below with Mac OS X as the standard operating system OS used by Macintosh computers by eliminating the need to use the older OS directly The Classic Environment can be loaded at login for faster activation when needed later on command or whenever a Mac OS application that requires it is launched to reduce the use of system resources when not needed It requires a full version of Mac OS 9 to be installed on the system and loads an instance of that OS in a sandbox environment replacing some low level system calls with equivalent calls to Mac OS X via updated system files and the Classic Support system enabler This sandbox is used to launch all classic Mac OS applications there is only one instance of the Classic process running for a given user and only one user per machine may be running Classic at a time If the user chooses to launch the Classic Environment only when needed launching a classic application first launches the Classic Environment which can be configured to appear in a window resembling the display of a computer booting into Mac OS 9 When the Classic Environment has finished loading the application launches When a classic application is in the foreground the menu bar at the top of the screen changes to look like the older Mac OS system menu Dialog boxes and other user interface elements retain their traditional appearance The Classic Environment provides a way to run Classic applications on Apple s G5 systems as well as on most G4 based computers sold after January 2003 These machines cannot boot Mac OS 9 or earlier without the bridging capabilities of the Classic Environment or other software see SheepShaver The Classic Environment s compatibility is usually sufficient for many applications provided the application using it does not require direct access to hardware or engage in full screen drawing However it is not a complete clone of Mac OS 9 The Finder included with Mac OS X v10 2 and later does not support the Reveal Object Apple events used by some Mac OS 9 applications causing the Reveal In Finder functionality for those applications to be lost Early releases of Mac OS X would often fail to draw window frames of Classic applications correctly and after the Classic Environment s windowing was made double buffered in Mac OS X Panther some older applications and games sometimes failed to update the screen properly such as the original Macintosh port of Doom However the Classic Environment resurrected some older applications that had previously been unusable on the Macintosh Quadra and Power Macintosh series this is because Mac OS X replaced Mac OS 9 s virtual memory system with a more standard and less fragile implementation The Classic Environment s performance is also generally acceptable with a few exceptions Most of an application is run directly as PowerPC code which would not be possible on Intel based Macs Motorola 68k code is handled by the same Motorola 68LC040 emulator that Mac OS 9 uses Some application functions are actually faster in the Classic Environment than under Mac OS 9 on equivalent hardware due to performance improvements in the newer operating system s device drivers These applications are largely those that use heavy disk processing and were often quickly ported to Mac OS X by their developers On the other hand applications that rely on heavy processing and which did not share resources under Mac OS 9 s co operative multitasking model will be interrupted by other non Classic processes under Mac OS X s preemptive multitasking The greater processing power of most systems that run Mac OS X compared to systems intended to run Mac OS 8 or 9 helps to mitigate the performance degradation of the Classic Environment s virtualization Dashboard Edit Main article Dashboard macOS Dashboard is an application for Apple Inc s macOS operating systems used as a secondary desktop for hosting mini applications known as widgets These are intended to be simple applications that do not take time to launch Dashboard applications supplied with macOS include a stock ticker weather report calculator and notepad users can create or download their own Before Mac OS X 10 7 Lion when Dashboard is activated the user s desktop is dimmed and widgets appear in the foreground Like application windows they can be moved around rearranged deleted and recreated so that more than one of the same Widget is open at the same time possibly with different settings New widgets can be opened via an icon bar on the bottom of the layer loading a list of available apps similar to the iOS homescreen or the macOS Launchpad After loading the widget is ready for use Dashboard was first introduced in Mac OS X 10 4 Tiger 90 91 92 It can be activated as an application from the Dock Launchpad or Spotlight It can also be accessed by a dashboard key 93 Alternatively the user can choose to make Dashboard open on moving the cursor into a preassigned hot corner or keyboard shortcut Starting with Mac OS X 10 7 Lion the Dashboard can be configured as a space accessed by swiping four fingers to the right from the Desktops either side of it In OS X 10 10 Yosemite the Dashboard is disabled by default as the Notification Center is now the primary method of displaying widgets Dashboard was removed in macOS Catalina 94 Grab Edit Grab 1 10 running on macOS High Sierra Grab was a built in utility for taking screenshots It supported capturing a marquee selection a whole window or the whole screen as well as timed screenshots The program originated from NeXTSTEP and was replaced by the Screenshot utility in macOS Mojave Grab saved screenshots in the TIFF format It was also possible to save screenshots in PDF format earlier versions of macOS or PNG format later versions iDVD Edit Main article iDVD iDVD is a discontinued DVD creation application Internet Connect Edit The Internet Connect program in Mac OS X allows the user to activate dial up connections to the Internet via an ISP or VPN It also provides a simple way to connect to an AirPort Network Up to the latest version of Mac OS X 10 4 the Internet Connect application provides more general tools than the more detailed Network pane in System Settings which allows the user to configure and control systemwide network settings However as of Mac OS X 10 5 Internet Connect s functions have been incorporated into the Network pane of System Settings and the application is no longer included Use of Internet Connect is generally not necessary if the Macintosh is connected to the internet through an Ethernet device to DSL or cable internet service except to manage connections to any subordinate bluetooth equipment iSync Edit Main article iSync iSync 3 running on Mac OS X Leopard iSync was a tool made to sync iCal and Address Book data to a SyncML enabled mobile phone via Bluetooth or by using a USB connection It was released on Jan 2 2003 with technology licensed from fusionOne Support for many pre October 2007 devices was built in 95 with newer devices being supported via manufacturer and third party iSync Plugins Support for Palm OS organizers and compatible smartphones was removed with the release of iSync 3 1 and Mac OS X 10 6 Snow Leopard BlackBerry OS Palm OS and Windows Mobile Pocket PC devices could not be used with iSync but were supported by third party applications Before the release of Mac OS X 10 4 iSync also synchronized a user s Safari bookmarks with the then usable Mac subscription service provided by Apple iTunes Edit Main article iTunes iTunes is a media player media library Internet radio broadcaster mobile device management utility and the client app for iTunes Store It is used to purchase play download and organize digital multimedia on personal computers running the macOS and Windows operating systems iTunes is developed by Apple Inc It was announced on January 9 2001 Because iTunes was criticized for having a bloated user experience Apple decided to split iTunes into separate apps as of macOS Catalina Apple Music Apple Podcasts and Apple TV Finder would take over the device management aspect that iTunes previously served 96 97 This change would not affect Windows or older macOS versions 98 Network Utility Edit Network Utility was an application for macOS up to MacOS Catalina that provided a variety of tools that could be used related to computer network information gathering and analysis Starting with macOS Big Sur the application is no longer included and was replaced with a message that it has been deprecated 99 100 Starting with macOS Ventura the application is removed from the OS Network Utility showed information about each of your network connections including the MAC address of the interface the IP address assigned to it its speed and status a count of data packets sent and received and a count of transmission errors and collisions It also provided a GUI to the netstat ping traceroute whois finger and stroke UNIX programs ODBC Administrator Edit ODBC Administrator 1 1 0 running on Mac OS X Leopard ODBC Administrator was a 32 bit utility in the Mac OS X operating system for administering ODBC which enables interaction with ODBC compliant data sources Features included connection pooling trace log creation and ODBC driver management among other administration features Although Apple started including the underlying iODBC libraries in Mac OS X Jaguar 101 and continued to do so through at least macOS Big Sur 102 Apple only included their ODBC Administrator through Mac OS X Leopard and temporarily made it available as a separate download since removed for Snow Leopard Alternatives to Apple s 32 bit ODBC Administrator include the free and open source 32 bit and 64 bit iODBC Administrator included with the iODBC SDK which is available for all extant versions of Mac OS X 10 0 x through 11 2 x 103 Remote Install Mac OS X Edit A screenshot of the Remote Install program Remote Install Mac OS X was a remote installer for use with MacBook Air laptops over the network It could run on a Mac or a Windows PC with an optical drive A client MacBook Air lacking an optical drive could then wirelessly connect to the other Mac or PC to perform system software installs Remote Install Mac OS X was released as part of Mac OS X 10 5 2 on February 12 2008 Support for the Mac mini was added in March 2009 allowing the DVD drive to be replaced with a second hard drive With the launch of Mac OS X Lion Apple has omitted Remote Install 104 105 A workaround is to enable Target Disk Mode Sherlock Edit Main article Sherlock software Sherlock named after fictional detective Sherlock Holmes is a file and web search tool created by Apple Inc for the PowerPC based classic Mac OS introduced with Mac OS 8 as an extension of the Mac OS Finder s file searching capabilities Like its predecessor System 7 5 s totally revamped Find File app adapted by Bill Monk from his Find Pro shareware find program 1 Sherlock searches for local files and file contents using the same basic indexing code and search logic found in AppleSearch Sherlock extended the system by enabling the user to search for items through the World Wide Web through a set of plugins which employed existing web search engines These plugins were written as plain text files so that it was a simple task for a user to write a Sherlock plugin Since most of the standard plug ins for Sherlock provided by Apple itself no longer function it was officially retired and removed in the release of Mac OS X 10 5 Leopard in 2007 Software Update Edit In Mac OS 9 and early versions of Mac OS X Software Update was a standalone tool The program was part of the CoreServices in OS X It could automatically inform users of new updates with new features and bug and security fixes to the operating system applications device drivers and firmware All updates required the user to enter their administrative password and some required a system restart It could be set to check for updates daily weekly monthly or not at all in addition it could download and store the associated pkg file the same type used by Installer to be installed at a later date and it maintained a history of installed updates Starting with Mac OS X 10 5 Leopard updates that required a reboot logged out the user prior to installation and automatically restarted the computer when complete In earlier versions of OS X the updates were installed but critical files were not replaced until the next system startup Beginning with OS X 10 8 Software Update became part of the App Store application Beginning with macOS Mojave 10 14 it became a part of System preferences X11 Edit Main article XQuartz In Mac OS X Tiger X11 was an optional install included on the install DVD Mac OS X Leopard Snow Leopard and Lion installed X11 by default but from OS X Mountain Lion 10 8 Apple dropped dedicated support for X11 with users directed to the open source XQuartz project to which it contributes instead 106 Development tools EditApple Developer Tools Interface Builder Xcode Quartz ComposerServer technology EditAppleShare IP Migration Fibre Channel Utility Gateway Setup Assistant Open Directory MySQL Manager QuickTime Broadcaster QuickTime Streaming Server RAID Admin Server Admin Workgroup Manager XgridCore components EditAppleScript Aqua Audio Units Bonjour Boot Camp Carbon Cocoa Core Animation Core Audio Core Data Core Image Core Video Darwin Mission Control Keychain OpenGL plist Quartz QuickTime Rosetta Smart folder Spaces WebKit XNUNotes Edit Mac OS Classic legacy disk image format supported by DiskImageMounter under Mac OS X versions 10 3 10 6 65 As of version 10 9 hdiutil can still convert these formats but unable to open or write them and version 11 0 removed all support References Edit a b Darren Murph December 6 2010 Apple Mac App Store open for business starting January 6th Engadget AOL Retrieved December 16 2010 a b Muchmore Michael January 6 2011 Apple s Mac App Store Hands On PC Magazine PC Magazine Retrieved January 6 2011 AppleInsider Staff October 20 2010 Apple s new Mac App Store coming to Snow Leopard within 90 days AppleInsider com Retrieved October 31 2010 Mac App Store Review November 3 2010 Apple Now Accepting Submissions For The Mac App Store MacAppStoreReview com Archived from the original on November 9 2010 Retrieved November 3 2010 Mac App Store Downloads Top One Million in First Day Press release Apple Inc January 7 2011 Retrieved January 10 2011 Shimpi Anand Lal Mac OS X 10 4 Tiger Review Retrieved 2018 05 09 Isaacson Walter 2011 Steve Jobs Simon amp Schuster p 132 ISBN 978 1 4516 4853 9 Jason Snell October 16 2014 OS X Yosemite New Notification Center finally gives widgets their due Macworld Use Spotlight as a Calculator OS X Daily 4 November 2009 Retrieved May 14 2012 a b Apple Chess README Apple Inc Retrieved January 11 2016 Source code of the latest version Apple Inc Retrieved January 11 2016 Dictionary User Guide for Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 01 Clover Juli Apple Releases macOS Catalina With Find My Screen Time and No More iTunes www macrumors com Retrieved 2019 11 07 Siracusa John 20 July 2011 Mac OS X 10 7 Lion the Ars Technica review arstechnica com Retrieved 23 August 2018 Take a photo or record a video in Photo Booth on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 04 Photo Booth User Guide for Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 04 Klosowski Thorin April 8 2015 OS X 10 10 3 Arrives with New Photos App Lifehacker Retrieved April 9 2015 Simmons Dan April 8 2015 Apple releases Mac app to store photos in iCloud BBC News Retrieved April 9 2015 About the OS X Yosemite v10 10 3 Update Apple Archived from the original on April 9 2015 Retrieved April 9 2015 The demise of Apple s Aperture and iPhoto What does it mean for you The Next Web June 27 2014 Retrieved April 9 2015 Panzarino Matthew June 27 2014 Apple To Cease Development Of Aperture And Transition Users To Photos For OS X TechCrunch AOL Retrieved April 9 2015 Open and play a file in QuickTime Player on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 11 08 WebKit WebKit Retrieved 2020 10 04 Back up your Mac with Time Machine Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 04 Back up your files with Time Machine on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 04 Use the Voice Memos app Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 04 Voice Memos User Guide for Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 04 Using Activity Monitor to read System Memory and determine how much RAM is being used Apple February 21 2012 Retrieved April 17 2012 Chung Jackson September 10 2008 Macnifying OS X Learning To Utilize Activity Monitor on Mac MakeUseOf MakeUseOf Retrieved April 17 2012 spiff October 28 2003 10 3 View all processes from a hierarchical perspective Mac OS X Hints Brad Miser 2004 Special Edition Using Mac OS X V10 3 Panther Que Publishing p 926 ISBN 978 0 7897 3075 6 Topher Kessler October 29 2013 Activity Monitor in OS X Mavericks brings significant changes CNET What is Airport Utility Switch to a Mac June 15 2009 Retrieved May 14 2014 Apple Support Downloads support apple com Retrieved Jun 22 2020 Airport Utility 5 6 1 for Windows Apple Support Apple June 11 2012 Retrieved October 14 2014 AirPort Utility for iPhone iPod touch and iPad on the iTunes App Store iTunes Preview Apple Retrieved August 14 2014 a b John Martellaro February 3 2012 AirPort Utility 6 for Lion is for Beginners The Mac Observer Retrieved May 14 2014 Topher Kessler January 31 2012 AirPort Utility 6 0 missing a number of features CNET Retrieved May 14 2014 How to install AirPort Utility 5 6 1 on Mountain Lion Retrieved December 10 2012 Share files between your Mac and Bluetooth devices Apple Support Retrieved 2023 03 09 Boot Camp Apple Support support apple com Retrieved 2017 11 20 Mac OS X Panther Applications and Utilities Console Mac Guides on MacRumors Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Tracking down trouble with the Console Macworld Nov 28 2007 Retrieved Jun 22 2020 a b OSX Log Files How To Use Console How to use the system console in OS X MacIssues March 23 2014 About Windows Migration Assistant Take a screenshot on your Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 04 Take screenshots or screen recordings on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 04 Sande Steven April 6 2011 Mac OS X 10 7 Lion features new System Information app The Unofficial Apple Weblog Retrieved September 22 2013 Etherington Darrell August 11 2011 Lion 101 How to know more about your Mac GigaOM Retrieved September 22 2013 How to Find Comprehensive Mac System Info via Terminal OSXDaily 2 February 2022 Retrieved 15 March 2022 What Is Mac OS X All Applications and Utilities Terminal Apple Inc Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Wunschiers Robbe 2004 01 01 Computational Biology Unix Linux data processing and programming with 19 figures and 12 tables Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9783540211426 Use zsh as the default shell on your Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 01 18 a b McElhearn Kirk 2006 12 26 The Mac OS X Command Line Unix Under the Hood John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470113851 Kissell Joe 2009 01 01 Take Control of the Mac Command Line with Terminal TidBITS Publishing Inc ISBN 9781933671550 Chapter 1 Introducing VoiceOver www apple com Retrieved 2020 10 04 Vision Accessibility Mac Apple Retrieved 2020 10 04 Use Control Center on your Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 05 17 McElhearn Kirk April 30 2012 Beyond zip Secrets of the Archive Utility Macworld Retrieved January 22 2022 Sandro Cuccla October 27 2012 How to Use amp Customize OS X s Built in Archive Utility App The Mac Observer Retrieved November 25 2013 Technical Note TN2123 CrashReporter Apple Inc April 1 2008 a b hdiutil 1 Mac OS X Manual Page Apple Inc Archived from the original on 2014 06 25 Retrieved 2014 09 03 a b System Library CoreServices DiskImageMounter app Contents Info plist DVD Player 4 6 release notes Alderman Nathan Best apps for playing Blu rays on your Mac in 2020 iMore Retrieved 27 June 2020 Intro to Feedback Assistant on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2022 04 16 Griffiths Rob October 27 2008 Leopard s year old annoyances Macworld Archived from the original on January 9 2009 Retrieved December 7 2008 Griffiths Rob June 8 2008 Put 10 5 s help windows in the background Macworld Archived from the original on December 26 2008 Retrieved December 7 2008 Holt Melissa July 26 2017 macOS Use Terminal to Send Help Viewer to the Back The Mac Observer Software Delivery Guide Specifying Install Operations Apple Retrieved 11 October 2016 Software Delivery Guide Apple Retrieved 15 March 2015 The Flat Package MacTech Retrieved 15 March 2015 OSX legacy packaging redux Matthew Brett Retrieved 15 March 2015 XAR NEW MacOS X 10 5 package format MacGeekBlog December 30 2006 Retrieved 15 March 2015 The loginwindow Process Apple Training Series Mac OS X Support Essentials v10 6 A Guide to Supporting and Troubleshooting Mac OS X v10 6 Snow Leopard flylib com Retrieved 2020 10 01 Mac OS X What Are All Those Processes 2019 11 21 Archived from the original on 2019 11 21 Retrieved 2020 10 01 How to Log Out Another User Without Logging In On Mac OS X OS X Daily 2015 08 17 Retrieved 2020 10 01 Share the screen of another Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 07 Whittaker Zack February 16 2012 OS X Mountain Lion unifies software update into Mac App Store ZDNet Find the model and serial number of your Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2020 10 01 corelocationagent 8 mojave man page www unix com Retrieved 2021 05 17 How to Install Command Line Tools in Mac OS X Without Xcode OS X Daily 2014 02 12 Retrieved 2021 11 08 managedclient 8 mojave man page www unix com Retrieved 2022 04 16 Edge Charles S Barker William Hunter Beau Sullivan Gene 31 December 2010 Enterprise Mac Security Mac OS X Snow Leopard Apress p 38 ISBN 978 1 4302 2731 1 Turning On Or Off the MacBook Power Chime MacMost com Retrieved 2020 10 01 ReportPanic 8 Darwin and macOS System Manager s Manual How to create your own OS X Dashboard Widgets from Safari Make Tech Easier Make Tech Easier 2010 07 26 Retrieved 2017 01 08 Haslam Karen Yosemite review Continuity and WiFi problems mar an otherwise pleasing update Macworld UK Retrieved 2017 01 10 Udell Sterling 2010 04 06 Pro Web Gadgets for Mobile and Desktop Apress ISBN 9781430225522 Hattersley Lucy 3 ways to Mac Dashboard useful again games entertainment and fresh new productivity widgets Macworld UK Retrieved 2017 01 13 Statt Nick June 4 2019 Apple will permanently remove Dashboard in macOS Catalina The Verge Retrieved June 5 2019 iSync Supported mobile phones in Mac OS X 10 4 10 5 and 10 6 Archived from the original on November 8 2008 Carman Ashley 2019 06 03 Apple breaks up iTunes creates separate Podcasts TV and Music apps for macOS The Verge Retrieved 2019 06 03 Roettgers Janko 2019 06 03 Apple Is Officially Killing iTunes Replacing It With Three Dedicated Media Apps Variety Retrieved 2019 06 03 Spangler Todd 2019 06 03 Apple s iTunes Store iTunes App for Windows Aren t Going Away Variety Retrieved 2019 06 03 Network Utility Deprecated in macOS Big Sur macrumors com Retrieved 2020 11 18 macOS 11 0 Big Sur The Ars Technica review arstechnica com November 12 2020 Retrieved 2020 11 18 Open Source Software in Mac OS X Jaguar 10 2 1 Open Source Software in macOS Big Sur 11 2 0 iODBC SDK Downloads Reinstalling software using Remote Install Mac OS X v10 5 and v10 6 Apple Inc Retrieved August 3 2011 Where is the Remote Install Mac OS X utility Apple Support Community Retrieved August 3 2011 Apple Removes X11 in OS X Mountain Lion Shifts Support to Open Source XQuartz Retrieved 2016 09 14 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of macOS built in apps amp oldid 1146081827 Software Update, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.