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Tiger Early Start Kit

EccentricAnomaly writes "If you can't wait until next spring for the official release of next version of Mac OS X, Apple is offering a Tiger Early Start Kit to those willing to pay $500 for an Apple Developer Select Membership. And if you don't want to spend the money, they've also added a developer overview page describing some of the guts of Mac OS X v10.4."

7 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. Quartz/JavaScript support? by kngthdn · · Score: 5, Informative

    The advanced drawing capabilities of Quartz are exposed to the Web Kit environment through a set of modular extensions to HTML. This will let you draw beautiful user interfaces using JavaScript.

    This has got to be the coolest new feature, considering how weak DHTML currently is. I could be wrong, but adding support for other APIs doesn't seem like it would be too hard. I'd love to finally be able to ditch Win32.

  2. Re:cheers by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here's hoping the G5 powerbook comes out at the same time as Tiger. That is a mac fans wet dream.

    Sorry, but until they have some new lower-power and cooler G5 chip it will never be in a Powerbook. Even the new iMac has big fans in it.

  3. Re:$500 to Beta Test! by boredMDer · · Score: 5, Informative
    Actually:

    $500 gets you select ADC membership +
    • Pre-release versions of Mac OS X v10.4 tiger and Xcode 2.0
    • Exclusive access to the latest tiger documentation
    • Direct, one-on-one access to tiger support engineers
    • Special developer discount on the latest Apple hardware
    • GM versions of Mac OS X v10.4 and Xcode 2.0 when available
    http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,11632974~mo de=flat
  4. Re:Marketing by ColMustard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Only Apple releases security patches for Jaguar, so your argument makes no sense. You're not paying for security, you pay for features. If you don't care about the new features then you obviously have no incentive to upgrade and you can keep your money. Not hard.

    --
    Moof.
  5. Re:DRM'ed? by burns210 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apple doesn't DRM their OSes... You do not receive(nor required to enter on install or later) a activation/product key.. I believe you are given an optional 'registration' type mini-survey that gets sent to Apple, but no personal information is sent, nor is it required.

    Apple doesn't care if you pirate it. They want you to buy it, they make multi-licenses and such a sweet deal and make it worth the money for single licenses. However, Apple makes money on the hardware, and the more users on the latest version of their OS, the less they have to support the old version and the more they can move forward.

  6. Re:$500 to Beta Test! by GeorgeMcBay · · Score: 5, Informative


    So, like the first guy said, $500 to beta test. No thank you. Why people fall for this I will never understand-if you want to invest in the company, buy stock.


    You seem to be missing the point -- but then, so do most of the people posting here, so maybe it is the fault of the misleading, biased copy in the Slashdot writeup.

    This program is for DEVELOPERS. You know, people who write software that will run on Apple's OSes. Getting early access to developer tools and upcoming OS releases is *easily worth* $500. I pay about three times more to Microsoft for MSDN for the same purpose -- to get a first look at the operating systems and tools. Not because I want to be first on my block for bragging rights, but because I may want to be first to market with an application that makes use of services in the new OS.

  7. Re:$500 to Beta Test! by MoneyT · · Score: 5, Informative

    That $500 gets you the following:

    OS X current version full install

    OS X Sever current version full install

    Beta access

    Free copies of OS X for every new release, on disc sent in the mail for a year. This includes a disc copy for the free point releases (i.e. 10.3.X)

    Discounts for exhibit hardware

    Discounts for hardware in general (roughly 15-20%)

    Access to the compatability labs (go to apple to test your software on all their machines)

    Developer tech support

    and various other minor discounts and benefits.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984