Snow Leopard Versus Windows 7
Compared: Mac OS X Snow Leopard and Windows 7
This is shaping up to be the autumn of new operating systems. The latest version of Mac OS X, Snow Leopard, ships to customers this Friday. Windows 7, the follow-up to the much-maligned Windows Vista, hits store shelves in late October. Neither operating system will drastically change the way you work.
Windows 7 builds on Windows Vista, smoothing out Vista’s rough spots and bringing a number of new end-user features (such as the reworked taskbar) to the table. Meanwhile, with Snow Leopard, Apple focuses on new under-the-hood technologies that offer subtle refinements and fixes. Still, there is plenty to say about how Apple’s next big cat and Microsoft’s lucky number stack up against each other.
Managing Your Files
Snow Leopard’s Finder and Windows 7’s Explorer have strikingly similar interfaces, with quick-search fields in the upper-right corner, path bars (OS X’s is optional and can be switched on in the View menu), and sidebars that provide easy access to various common locations on your computer.
Libraries
Windows 7 introduces a new feature to the mix: Libraries. Essentially, a library is a way to view the contents of several folders in one place. For example, the Pictures library pulls together the contents of the My Pictures and the Public Pictures folders by default. You can add or change the folders tied to any particular library, of course.
Libraries
Windows 7 introduces a new feature to the mix: Libraries. Essentially, a library is a way to view the contents of several folders in one place. For example, the Pictures library pulls together the contents of the My Pictures and the Public Pictures folders by default. You can add or change the folders tied to any particular library, of course.
Smart Folders
Nothing in Snow Leopard directly compares with Windows’ libraries. The closest OS X feature is saved searches (known as Smart Folders), but a saved search pulls together files based on search criteria, not location. You can’t, for example, create a smart folder that contains all of the photos from two particular folders. On the other hand, you can’t combine Windows 7 libraries with saved search results.
Windows 7, of course, has a smart folder feature as well.
Ridicuously Big Icons
Both Snow Leopard and Windows 7 permit a large icon view. Windows 7 supports icons in sizes up to 256 by 256 pixels. Snow Leopard one-ups Windows 7, though: The Finder can display icons in sizes up to a seemingly absurd 512 by 512 pixels (512-pixel icons were around in 10.5, but the Finder couldn’t take advantage of them outside the Quick Look and Cover Flow views).