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Mac OS 8

Mac OS 8 is an operating system that was released by Apple Computer on July 26, 1997.[2] It includes the largest overhaul of the classic Mac OS experience since the release of System 7, approximately six years before. It places a greater emphasis on color than prior versions. Released over a series of updates, Mac OS 8 represents an incremental integration of many of the technologies which had been developed from 1988 to 1996 for Apple's overly ambitious OS named Copland. Mac OS 8 helped modernize the Mac OS while Apple developed its next-generation operating system, Mac OS X (renamed in 2012 to OS X and then in 2016 to macOS).

Mac OS 8
Version of the Classic Mac OS operating system
Screenshot of Mac OS 8.1
DeveloperApple Computer
OS familyMacintosh
Working stateHistoric, unsupported
Source modelClosed source
Released to
manufacturing
July 26, 1997; 26 years ago (1997-07-26)
Latest release8.6 / May 10, 1999; 24 years ago (1999-05-10)[1]
Kernel typeMonolithic (68k),
nanokernel (PowerPC)
Default
user interface
Apple Platinum
LicenseProprietary
Preceded bySystem 7
Succeeded byMac OS 9
Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived September 22, 1999)
TaglineMac OS 8-8.1: A new look. A new feel. A dramatically new experience. Mac OS 8.5-8.6: Faster. Smarter. Far more clever.
Support status
Historical, unsupported as of May 2001

Mac OS 8 is one of Apple's most commercially successful software releases, selling over 1.2 million copies in the first two weeks.[2][3] As it came at a difficult time in Apple's history, many pirate groups refused to traffic in the new OS, encouraging people to buy it instead.[4]

Mac OS 8.0 introduces the most visible changes in the lineup, including the Platinum interface and a native PowerPC multithreaded Finder. Mac OS 8.1 introduces a new, more efficient file system named HFS Plus. Mac OS 8.5 is the first version of the Mac OS to require a PowerPC processor. It features PowerPC native versions of QuickDraw, AppleScript, and the Sherlock search utility. Its successor, Mac OS 9, was released on October 23, 1999.

Copland edit

Starting in 1988, Apple's next-generation operating system, which it originally envisioned to be "System 8" was codenamed Copland. It was announced in March 1994 alongside the introduction of the first PowerPC Macs. Apple intended Copland as a fully modern system, including native PowerPC code, intelligent agents, a microkernel, a customizable interface named Appearance Manager, a hardware abstraction layer, and a relational database integrated into the Finder. Copland was to be followed by Gershwin, which promised memory protection spaces and full preemptive multitasking.[5] The system was intended to be a full rewrite of the Mac OS, and Apple hoped to beat Microsoft Windows 95 to market with a development cycle of only one year.

The Copland development was hampered by many missed deadlines. The release date was first pushed back to the end of 1995, then to mid-1996, late 1996, and finally to the end of 1997. With a dedicated team of 500 software engineers and an annual budget of $250 million, Apple executives began to grow impatient with the project continually falling behind schedule. In August 1996, Apple chief technology officer Ellen Hancock froze development of Copland[6] and Apple began a search for an operating system developed outside the company.[5] This ultimately led to Apple buying NeXT and developing Rhapsody which would eventually evolve into Mac OS X in 2001 (now named macOS).

At the Worldwide Developers Conference in January 1997, Apple chief executive officer (CEO) Gil Amelio announced that, rather than release Copland as one monolithic release, Copland features would be phased into the Mac OS following a six-month release cycle. These updates began with Mac OS 7.6, released during WWDC. Mac OS 8.0, released six months later, continued to integrate Copland technologies into the Mac OS.[7]

Mac OS 8.0 edit

Developed with the codename "Tempo", Mac OS 8.0 was announced on July 22, 1997,[8] and released on July 26. The early beta releases of the product which were circulated to developers and Apple internal audiences, were branded as Mac OS 7.7, superseding the then-current release, Mac OS 7.6. The software was renamed Mac OS 8 before final release.

Major changes in this version included the Platinum theme, a Finder which was PowerPC-native and multithreaded, and greater customization of the user interface.

Other features introduced in Mac OS 8.0 include the following:[9]

  • Customization of system fonts and increased use of the user-set accent color.
  • Pop-up context menus, accessed via ctrl-click with a one-button mouse.
  • Pop-up (or tabbed) windows in the Finder.
  • Spring-loaded folders.
  • Live scrolling.
  • WindowShade widget in window titlebars.
  • Multithreaded Finder — file copy operations run in a separate thread and don't block the Finder UI.
  • Redesigned color picker.
  • Desktop Pictures control panel, allowing photographs to be set as the desktop background; not only tiled patterns.
  • Simple Finder, an option which reduces Finder menus to basic operations, to avoid overwhelming new users.
  • Relocation of the 'Help' menu from an icon at the right end of the menu bar to a standard textual menu positioned after the application's menus.
  • A faster Apple Guide, featuring HTML help pages.
  • Native support of Apple Filing Protocol over IP.
  • Performance improvements to virtual memory, AppleScript execution and system startup times.
  • Faster desktop rebuilding.

Mac OS 8.1 edit

Released on January 19, 1998, Mac OS 8.1 was the last version of the Mac OS to run on Motorola 68000 series processors. It addressed performance and reliability improvements. It introduced a new file system named HFS+, also named Mac OS Extended, which supported large file sizes and made more efficient use of larger hard drives via using a smaller block size. To upgrade, users must reformat the hard drive, which deletes the entire contents of the drive. Some third-party utilities later appeared that preserved the user's data while upgrading to HFS+. The 68040 systems do not support booting from HFS+ disks; the boot drive must be HFS.[10]

Mac OS 8.1 was the first system to have a Universal Disk Format (UDF) driver,[a] allowing for DVD support on the Mac for the first time. It also shipped with the new Java runtime (JDK 1.1.3).

Mac OS 8.1 also included an enhanced version of PC Exchange, allowing Macintosh users to see the long file names (up to 255 characters) on files that were created on PCs running Microsoft Windows, and supporting FAT32.

Mac OS 8.1 is the earliest version of the Mac OS that can run Carbon applications. Carbon support requires a PowerPC processor and installation of the CarbonLib software from Apple's website; it is not a standard component of Mac OS 8.1. Applications needing later versions of CarbonLib will not run on Mac OS 8.1. More recent versions of CarbonLib require Mac OS 8.6.

As part of Apple's agreement with Microsoft, 8.1 included Internet Explorer 3 initially, but soon switched to Internet Explorer 4 as its default browser.

Mac OS 8.1 was free for Mac OS 8 owners and was available in February 1998 via the apple.com website.

Mac OS 8.5 edit

Released October 17, 1998, Mac OS 8.5 was the first version of the Mac OS to run solely on Macs equipped with a PowerPC processor. If Mac OS 8.5 is installed on a 68k system, the Sad Mac error screen will appear. As such, it replaced some, but not all, of the 680x0 code with PowerPC code, improving system performance by relying less on 680x0 emulation.

It introduced the Sherlock search utility. This allowed users to search the contents of documents on hard drives (if the user had let it index the drive), or extend a search to the Internet. Sherlock plug-ins started appearing at this time; these allowed users to search the contents of other websites.

Mac OS 8.5 includes several performance improvements. Copying files over a network was faster than prior versions and Apple advertised it as being "faster than Windows NT".[11] AppleScript was also rewritten to use only PowerPC code, which improved AppleScript execution speed significantly.

Font Smoothing, system-wide antialiasing for type was also introduced. The HTML format for online help, first adopted by the Finder's Info Center in Mac OS 8, was now used throughout. This made it easier for software companies to write online help systems. The PPP control panel was removed and replaced with Remote Access, which provides the same functionality but also allows connections to AppleTalk Remote Access (ARA) servers.

The installation process was simplified considerably in Mac OS 8.5. In earlier versions the installer worked in segments and often required a user to click to continue in between stages of the installation. This was a holdover from the days when the OS was distributed on multiple floppy disks, disk swapping promoting a natural segmentation model. The Mac OS 8.5 installer generally required very little user interaction once it was started. Customisation options were also much more detailed yet simpler to manage.

From Mac OS 8.5 onward, MacLinkPlus document translation software is no longer bundled as part of the Mac OS.

Mac OS 8.5 was the first version of the Mac OS to support themes, or skins, which could change the default Apple Platinum look of the Mac OS to "Gizmo" or "HiTech" themes. This radical changing of the computer's appearance was removed at the last minute, and appeared only in beta versions, though users could still make (and share) their own themes and use them with the OS. The Appearance control panel was also updated to support proportional scroll bars, and added the option for both scroll arrows to be placed at the bottom of a scroll bar.

Along with themes support, 8.5 was the first version to support 32-bit icons. Icons now had 24-bit color (16.7 million colors) and an 8-bit alpha channel, allowing for transparency-translucency effects.

The application palette made its debut with 8.5 – the application menu at the right side of the menu bar could be resized to show the active application's name, or 'torn off' into a palette of buttons. This palette could be customized in many ways, by removing the window frame and changing the size and layout of the buttons. Apple provided no user interface to set these options, instead making them available via AppleScript and Apple Events and relying on third parties to provide a user interface for the task. By setting it to display horizontally and turning off the window border, the palette's look and function could be configured to resemble the Windows 95 task bar.

Mac OS 8.5.1 edit

Mac OS 8.5.1, released December 7, 1998, was a minor update to Mac OS 8.5 that fixes several bugs that caused crashes and data corruption.

Mac OS 8.6 edit

Released May 10, 1999, Mac OS 8.6 added support to the Mac OS nanokernel to handle preemptive tasks via the Multiprocessing Services 2.x and later developer API. This update improved PowerBook battery life and added Sherlock 2.1. This free update for Mac users running 8.5 and 8.5.1 was faster and much more stable than either version of 8.5.x and was also the first version of Mac OS to display the version number as part of the startup screen. However, there was still no process separation; the system still used cooperative multitasking between processes, and even a process that is Multiprocessing Services-aware still had a portion that ran in the "blue task", which also ran all programs that were unaware of it, and was the only task that could run 68k code.

Reception edit

While CNET's initial review of Mac OS 8 was more circumspect,[12] its editorial staff named it one of the best products of 1997 in their year-end roundup.[13]

Versions edit

Version Release date Changes Computer Codename Price
8.0 July 26, 1997 Initial release Power Macintosh G3 Tempo $99 US
8.1 January 19, 1998

HFS+ file system iMac (Bondi Blue) Rev. A Bride of Buster Free update
8.5 October 17, 1998 PowerPC required, Sherlock, Themes, 32-bit icons iMac (Bondi Blue) Rev. B Allegro $99 US
8.5.1 December 7, 1998

Crash, memory leaks and data corruption fixes iMac (5 flavors) The Ric Ford (of Macintouch) Release Free update
8.6 May 10, 1999

(download) December 4, 2010, at the Wayback Machine

New nanokernel to support Multiprocessing Services 2.0, battery life improvement iBook Veronica

Compatibility edit

Macintosh model 8.0[14] 8.1[14] 8.5[14] 8.6[14]
All Centris / Quadra machines Yes No
Macintosh LC 475, 575, 580
PowerBook 190
PowerBook 520
PowerBook 540
PowerBook Duo 2300 Yes
PowerBook 5300
PowerBook 1400
PowerBook 2400
PowerBook 3400
Power Macintosh 4400
Power Macintosh 5200
Power Macintosh 5300
Power Macintosh 5400
Power Macintosh 5500
Power Macintosh 6100
Power Macintosh 6200
Power Macintosh 6300
Power Macintosh 6400
Power Macintosh 6500
Power Macintosh 7100
Power Macintosh 7200
Power Macintosh 7300
Power Macintosh 7500
Power Macintosh 8100
Power Macintosh 8500
Power Macintosh 9500
Power Macintosh 7600
Power Macintosh 8600
Power Macintosh 9600
Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh
Power Macintosh G3 All-In-One
Power Macintosh G3 Yes: machine-specific version only Yes
PowerBook G3 No
iMac G3 Yes: machine-specific version only Yes
iMac G3 (266 MHz, 333 MHz) No
Power Macintosh G3 Blue and White Yes: machine-specific version only Yes
iMac G3 (Slot Loading) No Yes: machine-specific version only
Power Macintosh G4 (PCI Graphics)
Power Macintosh G4 (AGP Graphics)
iBook

See also edit

Timeline of Mac operating systems
ARM architecture familyX86PowerPC68kMacBook Air (Apple silicon)iMac ProRetina MacBook ProMacBook AirApple–Intel architecturePower Mac G5Power Mac G4iMac G3Power MacintoshMacintosh QuadraMacintosh PortableMacintosh SE/30Macintosh IIMacintosh PlusMacintosh 128KmacOS SonomamacOS VenturamacOS MontereymacOS Big SurmacOS CatalinamacOS MojavemacOS High SierramacOS SierraOS X El CapitanOS X YosemiteOS X MavericksOS X Mountain LionMac OS X LionMac OS X Snow LeopardMac OS X LeopardMac OS X TigerMac OS X PantherMac OS X 10.2Mac OS X 10.1Mac OS X 10.0Mac OS X Server 1.0Mac OS X Public BetaA/UXA/UXA/UXMacWorks XLMacWorks XLSun RemarketingMacWorks XLMac OS 9Mac OS 9Mac OS 9Mac OS 8Mac OS 8Mac OS 8Mac OS 8System 7System 7System 7System 7System 6Classic Mac OSClassic Mac OSClassic Mac OSClassic Mac OSSystem 1Finder (software)Finder (software)Finder (software)Finder (software)Finder (software)Finder (software)Finder (software)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Read and write version support for UDF version 1.02 only. Some earlier versions of the operating system could support UDF via third-party utilities as far back as 7.5, along with additional UDF version support. Future versions of UDF were not officially supported until 8.6.

References edit

  1. ^ https://archive.today/20130209071935/http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macos/359
  2. ^ a b . Archived from the original on April 23, 2009. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  3. ^ "Mac OS 8 Sales on Fire". Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2007.
  4. ^ "Where do you want to pirate today?". Forbes. August 8, 1997. from the original on August 27, 2017. Retrieved September 4, 2017. In fact, the latest word out in the Macwarez scene is that pirates shouldn't copy Apple's OS 8—Mac's latest operating system—they should buy it, since Apple so desperately needs the money.
  5. ^ a b Linzmayer, Owen (1999). Apple Confidential – "The Copland Crisis". No Starch Press. pp. 225–226.
  6. ^ "How Apple Took its NeXT Step". Archived from the original on July 24, 2012. in August, newly hired chief technologist Ellen Hancock froze development altogether.
  7. ^ Carlton, Jim (1999) [1997]. Apple: The Inside Story of Intrigue, Egomania and Business Blunders (2nd ed.). London: Random House Business Books. ISBN 0099270730. OCLC 925000937.
  8. ^ . Apple. July 22, 1997. Archived from the original on February 20, 1999. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  9. ^ Pogue, David; Schorr, Joseph (1999). MacWorld Mac Secrets, 5th Edition. IDG. pp. 318–319. ISBN 9780764540400.
  10. ^ "LowEndMac". February 13, 2015. from the original on February 18, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  11. ^ "Apple Introduces Mac OS 8.5 - The Must-Have Upgrade". from the original on April 23, 2009. Retrieved May 10, 2011.
  12. ^ "Mac OS 8 has arrived". CNET. from the original on October 12, 2022. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  13. ^ . CNET. December 30, 1997. Archived from the original on April 23, 1999. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  14. ^ a b c d "Mac OS 8 and 9 compatibility with Macintosh computers". Apple Inc. from the original on March 4, 2009. Retrieved February 28, 2009.

External links edit

Preceded by Mac OS 8
1997
Succeeded by

this, article, about, eighth, release, classic, version, macos, formerly, mountain, lion, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, re. This article is about the eighth release of the classic Mac OS For version 10 8 of macOS formerly OS X see OS X Mountain Lion This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mac OS 8 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mac OS 8 is an operating system that was released by Apple Computer on July 26 1997 2 It includes the largest overhaul of the classic Mac OS experience since the release of System 7 approximately six years before It places a greater emphasis on color than prior versions Released over a series of updates Mac OS 8 represents an incremental integration of many of the technologies which had been developed from 1988 to 1996 for Apple s overly ambitious OS named Copland Mac OS 8 helped modernize the Mac OS while Apple developed its next generation operating system Mac OS X renamed in 2012 to OS X and then in 2016 to macOS Mac OS 8Version of the Classic Mac OS operating systemScreenshot of Mac OS 8 1DeveloperApple ComputerOS familyMacintoshWorking stateHistoric unsupportedSource modelClosed sourceReleased tomanufacturingJuly 26 1997 26 years ago 1997 07 26 Latest release8 6 May 10 1999 24 years ago 1999 05 10 1 Kernel typeMonolithic 68k nanokernel PowerPC Defaultuser interfaceApple PlatinumLicenseProprietaryPreceded bySystem 7Succeeded byMac OS 9Official websiteApple Products Mac OS 8 6 at the Wayback Machine archived September 22 1999 TaglineMac OS 8 8 1 A new look A new feel A dramatically new experience Mac OS 8 5 8 6 Faster Smarter Far more clever Support statusHistorical unsupported as of May 2001Mac OS 8 is one of Apple s most commercially successful software releases selling over 1 2 million copies in the first two weeks 2 3 As it came at a difficult time in Apple s history many pirate groups refused to traffic in the new OS encouraging people to buy it instead 4 Mac OS 8 0 introduces the most visible changes in the lineup including the Platinum interface and a native PowerPC multithreaded Finder Mac OS 8 1 introduces a new more efficient file system named HFS Plus Mac OS 8 5 is the first version of the Mac OS to require a PowerPC processor It features PowerPC native versions of QuickDraw AppleScript and the Sherlock search utility Its successor Mac OS 9 was released on October 23 1999 Contents 1 Copland 2 Mac OS 8 0 3 Mac OS 8 1 4 Mac OS 8 5 4 1 Mac OS 8 5 1 5 Mac OS 8 6 6 Reception 7 Versions 8 Compatibility 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksCopland editMain article Copland operating system Starting in 1988 Apple s next generation operating system which it originally envisioned to be System 8 was codenamed Copland It was announced in March 1994 alongside the introduction of the first PowerPC Macs Apple intended Copland as a fully modern system including native PowerPC code intelligent agents a microkernel a customizable interface named Appearance Manager a hardware abstraction layer and a relational database integrated into the Finder Copland was to be followed by Gershwin which promised memory protection spaces and full preemptive multitasking 5 The system was intended to be a full rewrite of the Mac OS and Apple hoped to beat Microsoft Windows 95 to market with a development cycle of only one year The Copland development was hampered by many missed deadlines The release date was first pushed back to the end of 1995 then to mid 1996 late 1996 and finally to the end of 1997 With a dedicated team of 500 software engineers and an annual budget of 250 million Apple executives began to grow impatient with the project continually falling behind schedule In August 1996 Apple chief technology officer Ellen Hancock froze development of Copland 6 and Apple began a search for an operating system developed outside the company 5 This ultimately led to Apple buying NeXT and developing Rhapsody which would eventually evolve into Mac OS X in 2001 now named macOS At the Worldwide Developers Conference in January 1997 Apple chief executive officer CEO Gil Amelio announced that rather than release Copland as one monolithic release Copland features would be phased into the Mac OS following a six month release cycle These updates began with Mac OS 7 6 released during WWDC Mac OS 8 0 released six months later continued to integrate Copland technologies into the Mac OS 7 Mac OS 8 0 editDeveloped with the codename Tempo Mac OS 8 0 was announced on July 22 1997 8 and released on July 26 The early beta releases of the product which were circulated to developers and Apple internal audiences were branded as Mac OS 7 7 superseding the then current release Mac OS 7 6 The software was renamed Mac OS 8 before final release Major changes in this version included the Platinum theme a Finder which was PowerPC native and multithreaded and greater customization of the user interface Other features introduced in Mac OS 8 0 include the following 9 Customization of system fonts and increased use of the user set accent color Pop up context menus accessed via ctrl click with a one button mouse Pop up or tabbed windows in the Finder Spring loaded folders Live scrolling WindowShade widget in window titlebars Multithreaded Finder file copy operations run in a separate thread and don t block the Finder UI Redesigned color picker Desktop Pictures control panel allowing photographs to be set as the desktop background not only tiled patterns Simple Finder an option which reduces Finder menus to basic operations to avoid overwhelming new users Relocation of the Help menu from an icon at the right end of the menu bar to a standard textual menu positioned after the application s menus A faster Apple Guide featuring HTML help pages Native support of Apple Filing Protocol over IP Performance improvements to virtual memory AppleScript execution and system startup times Faster desktop rebuilding Mac OS 8 1 editReleased on January 19 1998 Mac OS 8 1 was the last version of the Mac OS to run on Motorola 68000 series processors It addressed performance and reliability improvements It introduced a new file system named HFS also named Mac OS Extended which supported large file sizes and made more efficient use of larger hard drives via using a smaller block size To upgrade users must reformat the hard drive which deletes the entire contents of the drive Some third party utilities later appeared that preserved the user s data while upgrading to HFS The 68040 systems do not support booting from HFS disks the boot drive must be HFS 10 Mac OS 8 1 was the first system to have a Universal Disk Format UDF driver a allowing for DVD support on the Mac for the first time It also shipped with the new Java runtime JDK 1 1 3 Mac OS 8 1 also included an enhanced version of PC Exchange allowing Macintosh users to see the long file names up to 255 characters on files that were created on PCs running Microsoft Windows and supporting FAT32 Mac OS 8 1 is the earliest version of the Mac OS that can run Carbon applications Carbon support requires a PowerPC processor and installation of the CarbonLib software from Apple s website it is not a standard component of Mac OS 8 1 Applications needing later versions of CarbonLib will not run on Mac OS 8 1 More recent versions of CarbonLib require Mac OS 8 6 As part of Apple s agreement with Microsoft 8 1 included Internet Explorer 3 initially but soon switched to Internet Explorer 4 as its default browser Mac OS 8 1 was free for Mac OS 8 owners and was available in February 1998 via the apple com website Mac OS 8 5 editReleased October 17 1998 Mac OS 8 5 was the first version of the Mac OS to run solely on Macs equipped with a PowerPC processor If Mac OS 8 5 is installed on a 68k system the Sad Mac error screen will appear As such it replaced some but not all of the 680x0 code with PowerPC code improving system performance by relying less on 680x0 emulation It introduced the Sherlock search utility This allowed users to search the contents of documents on hard drives if the user had let it index the drive or extend a search to the Internet Sherlock plug ins started appearing at this time these allowed users to search the contents of other websites Mac OS 8 5 includes several performance improvements Copying files over a network was faster than prior versions and Apple advertised it as being faster than Windows NT 11 AppleScript was also rewritten to use only PowerPC code which improved AppleScript execution speed significantly Font Smoothing system wide antialiasing for type was also introduced The HTML format for online help first adopted by the Finder s Info Center in Mac OS 8 was now used throughout This made it easier for software companies to write online help systems The PPP control panel was removed and replaced with Remote Access which provides the same functionality but also allows connections to AppleTalk Remote Access ARA servers The installation process was simplified considerably in Mac OS 8 5 In earlier versions the installer worked in segments and often required a user to click to continue in between stages of the installation This was a holdover from the days when the OS was distributed on multiple floppy disks disk swapping promoting a natural segmentation model The Mac OS 8 5 installer generally required very little user interaction once it was started Customisation options were also much more detailed yet simpler to manage From Mac OS 8 5 onward MacLinkPlus document translation software is no longer bundled as part of the Mac OS Mac OS 8 5 was the first version of the Mac OS to support themes or skins which could change the default Apple Platinum look of the Mac OS to Gizmo or HiTech themes This radical changing of the computer s appearance was removed at the last minute and appeared only in beta versions though users could still make and share their own themes and use them with the OS The Appearance control panel was also updated to support proportional scroll bars and added the option for both scroll arrows to be placed at the bottom of a scroll bar Along with themes support 8 5 was the first version to support 32 bit icons Icons now had 24 bit color 16 7 million colors and an 8 bit alpha channel allowing for transparency translucency effects The application palette made its debut with 8 5 the application menu at the right side of the menu bar could be resized to show the active application s name or torn off into a palette of buttons This palette could be customized in many ways by removing the window frame and changing the size and layout of the buttons Apple provided no user interface to set these options instead making them available via AppleScript and Apple Events and relying on third parties to provide a user interface for the task By setting it to display horizontally and turning off the window border the palette s look and function could be configured to resemble the Windows 95 task bar Mac OS 8 5 1 edit Mac OS 8 5 1 released December 7 1998 was a minor update to Mac OS 8 5 that fixes several bugs that caused crashes and data corruption Mac OS 8 6 editReleased May 10 1999 Mac OS 8 6 added support to the Mac OS nanokernel to handle preemptive tasks via the Multiprocessing Services 2 x and later developer API This update improved PowerBook battery life and added Sherlock 2 1 This free update for Mac users running 8 5 and 8 5 1 was faster and much more stable than either version of 8 5 x and was also the first version of Mac OS to display the version number as part of the startup screen However there was still no process separation the system still used cooperative multitasking between processes and even a process that is Multiprocessing Services aware still had a portion that ran in the blue task which also ran all programs that were unaware of it and was the only task that could run 68k code Reception editWhile CNET s initial review of Mac OS 8 was more circumspect 12 its editorial staff named it one of the best products of 1997 in their year end roundup 13 Versions editVersion Release date Changes Computer Codename Price8 0 July 26 1997 Initial release Power Macintosh G3 Tempo 99 US8 1 January 19 1998 download HFS file system iMac Bondi Blue Rev A Bride of Buster Free update8 5 October 17 1998 PowerPC required Sherlock Themes 32 bit icons iMac Bondi Blue Rev B Allegro 99 US8 5 1 December 7 1998 1 Crash memory leaks and data corruption fixes iMac 5 flavors The Ric Ford of Macintouch Release Free update8 6 May 10 1999 download Archived December 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine New nanokernel to support Multiprocessing Services 2 0 battery life improvement iBook VeronicaCompatibility editMacintosh model 8 0 14 8 1 14 8 5 14 8 6 14 All Centris Quadra machines Yes NoMacintosh LC 475 575 580PowerBook 190PowerBook 520PowerBook 540PowerBook Duo 2300 YesPowerBook 5300PowerBook 1400PowerBook 2400PowerBook 3400Power Macintosh 4400Power Macintosh 5200Power Macintosh 5300Power Macintosh 5400Power Macintosh 5500Power Macintosh 6100Power Macintosh 6200Power Macintosh 6300Power Macintosh 6400Power Macintosh 6500Power Macintosh 7100Power Macintosh 7200Power Macintosh 7300Power Macintosh 7500Power Macintosh 8100Power Macintosh 8500Power Macintosh 9500Power Macintosh 7600Power Macintosh 8600Power Macintosh 9600Twentieth Anniversary MacintoshPower Macintosh G3 All In OnePower Macintosh G3 Yes machine specific version only YesPowerBook G3 NoiMac G3 Yes machine specific version only YesiMac G3 266 MHz 333 MHz NoPower Macintosh G3 Blue and White Yes machine specific version only YesiMac G3 Slot Loading No Yes machine specific version onlyPower Macintosh G4 PCI Graphics Power Macintosh G4 AGP Graphics iBookSee also editList of Apple operating systemsTimeline of Mac operating systems vteNotes edit Read and write version support for UDF version 1 02 only Some earlier versions of the operating system could support UDF via third party utilities as far back as 7 5 along with additional UDF version support Future versions of UDF were not officially supported until 8 6 References edit https archive today 20130209071935 http www versiontracker com dyn moreinfo macos 359 a b Apple Sells 1 2 Million Copies of Mac OS 8 Best Software Product Sales Ever in First Two Weeks of Availability Archived from the original on April 23 2009 Retrieved October 1 2017 Mac OS 8 Sales on Fire Archived from the original on July 18 2012 Retrieved March 30 2007 Where do you want to pirate today Forbes August 8 1997 Archived from the original on August 27 2017 Retrieved September 4 2017 In fact the latest word out in the Macwarez scene is that pirates shouldn t copy Apple s OS 8 Mac s latest operating system they should buy it since Apple so desperately needs the money a b Linzmayer Owen 1999 Apple Confidential The Copland Crisis No Starch Press pp 225 226 How Apple Took its NeXT Step Archived from the original on July 24 2012 in August newly hired chief technologist Ellen Hancock froze development altogether Carlton Jim 1999 1997 Apple The Inside Story of Intrigue Egomania and Business Blunders 2nd ed London Random House Business Books ISBN 0099270730 OCLC 925000937 Apple Introduces Mac OS 8 Most Significant Macintosh Operating System Release Since 1984 Apple July 22 1997 Archived from the original on February 20 1999 Retrieved October 2 2019 Pogue David Schorr Joseph 1999 MacWorld Mac Secrets 5th Edition IDG pp 318 319 ISBN 9780764540400 LowEndMac February 13 2015 Archived from the original on February 18 2015 Retrieved February 18 2015 Apple Introduces Mac OS 8 5 The Must Have Upgrade Archived from the original on April 23 2009 Retrieved May 10 2011 Mac OS 8 has arrived CNET Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved February 6 2023 Best of 97 CNET looks back at the year s top products CNET December 30 1997 Archived from the original on April 23 1999 Retrieved February 6 2023 a b c d Mac OS 8 and 9 compatibility with Macintosh computers Apple Inc Archived from the original on March 4 2009 Retrieved February 28 2009 External links editTechnical Note TN1102 Mac OS 8 at the Wayback Machine archived February 22 2004 from apple com Technical Note TN1121 Mac OS 8 1 at the Wayback Machine archived April 10 2004 from apple com Technical Note TN1142 Mac OS 8 5 at the Wayback Machine archived August 21 2004 from apple com Technical Note TN1163 Mac OS 8 6 at the Wayback Machine archived June 19 2004 from apple com Mac OS 8 Hardware CompatibilityPreceded byMac OS 7 Mac OS 81997 Succeeded byMac OS 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mac OS 8 amp oldid 1159709287, 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.