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What's wrong with Mac OS X Snow Leopard 
8/29/2009

There's no doubt that Mac OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard, is a worthwhile upgrade -- a no-brainer for people with Intel Macs. I've pointed out the 7 best features in Snow Leopard, and my three-part series of slideshows details the many enhancements in Snow Leopard for all users, for office users, and for power users.

But Snow Leopard has a few flaws that should not go ignored in the enthusiasm for its many strengths. In fact, some of the more welcome additions to Snow Leopard also house some of the bigger disappointments. By not going far enough, Snow Leopard's support for Exchange 2007 and Cisco's VPN protocol are chief among them.

[ Get details on new Mac OS X features in InfoWorld's "What's new in Mac OS X Snow Leopard" slideshow trio: new features for all users, for office users, and for power users. | Discover the 7 best features of Mac OS X Snow Leopard. ]

It's no secret that Apple has had a conflicted relationship with the enterprise for years. But when Apple switched to the Intel CPU and Parallels created virtualization software to allow Macs to run Windows side by side with Mac OS X, individuals stopped having to worry about whether Apple formally supported the enterprise -- Macs could fit in very well on their own, leading to a significant rise in business usage of the Mac.

Fast-forward to a year ago, when Apple introduced enterprise capabilities such as Exchange support and Cisco VPN to its iPhone and said it would bring the same capabilities to Mac OS X. With Snow Leopard, it has, but as with the iPhone's enterprise support, Apple stops just shy of doing it right. So while Snow Leopard is an even easier fit as a corporate PC, it continues to have unnecessary limitations that will make IT -- especially in larger organizations -- resist the Mac.

Mail's Exchange capabilities aren't quite enterprise-class
Configuring Snow Leopard to work with Exchange 2007 is a snap; the auto-setup routine usually does the trick, and the setup screens for manual configuration are easy to work through. Apple's Mail, iCal, and Address Book clients are fast-loading, capable apps that let users avoid Microsoft's bloated, incredibly slow Entourage 2008, which has long been a problem for corporate IT, offering fewer capabilities than Outlook and more balkiness when working with Exchange Server.

 

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