You Can Now Run Beta Versions of OS X—For Free
redletterdave (2493036) writes "Apple on Tuesday announced the OS X Beta Seed Program, which allows anyone to download and install pre-release Mac software for the sake of testing and submitting feedback before the public launch. Until Tuesday, Apple charged users $99 a year to test out new OS X software—doing so required a paid-up developer account. (Testing new iPhone software still requires a separate developer account for another $99 a year.) Now, much the same way new OS X software is now totally free to download, it's also free to try out. All you need is an Apple ID to sign up."
Where is Apple's future? It seems to be slowly eating itself
I feel like I've been running betas since Lion.
cmon Apple, you know you want to.
Hey what a great chance for me to provide free labour to a multi national corporation. In exchange for ? Er....
Gee I can't wait to sign up :)
iWould.
Good luck with this Apple, but in my experience the bug reports and feedback you'll get from Joe Public will be next to worthless. Don't waste your time on them; concentrate on what paid-up developers are telling you about your betas and fix the issues they identify first, please.
If I had a second Mac, I would be all over this. Unfortunately, my machine is my main work machine so I can't risk installing an OS that is in beta. Still, this is incredibly cool and will hopefully make their release OS software even more stable (more eyes catching problems while in beta and all that).
You can use another partition for the beta.
my machine is my main work machine so I can't risk installing an OS that is in beta.
Install it on an external drive (preferably an SSD).
As best I can tell, OS X is free to download only if you already have OS X. I don't see any way that someone who doesn't already have a very recent version of OS X can download it for free.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
But it will also work (albeit slowly) on a USB stick or even SD card.
1% APY, No fees, Online Bank https://captl1.co/2uIErYq Don't let your $$$ sit in a no-interest acct.
Sign me up!
How is this more free than the OSX you get with your mac?
Unless OSX can suddenly be installed on non-apple pc's.
Until running cat on a large text file doesn't crash the terminal (blowing up all open terminals) and the built-in PDF viewer doesn't hang the OS for ~1s sometimes when scrolling through a static PDF (provoking the spinny color thing of doom), I'll stick to KDE or Cinnamon.
You can use another partition for the beta.
Does that work for Slashdot as well?
#DeleteChrome
How big?
Haven't noticed that either. Is that another huge file thing?
dual boot?
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
You can use another partition for the beta.
VMWare also supports OSX now (at least vSphere/ESX does), so if you have Workstation/Fusion, it may well work as-is...
Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
those invited testers paid nothing to be download, test, and evaluate OS X betas.
You mean: those invited testers WERE paid nothing to download, test, and evaluate OS X betas.
Typically when a client wants me to test his product I'm getting paid. But I value my time and expertise (so do my clients), so YMMV.
lucm, indeed.
You can use another partition for the beta.
Does that work for Slashdot as well?
Booo
lucm, indeed.
Firewire would be ideal.
Good-bye
To get it out of the way, I am not an Apple hater but I am not a fanboy either. I have a MacBook, but Linux based OS' run my main systems. My thoughts:
There was once a time where every release of OS X was gutted relative to the previous version, sometimes eliminating upwards of 10 or more gigabytes of code. OS X only got faster with each release. I am not sure where that came to an end, but the last few release have been steadily slowing down my MacBook.
I have also sadly watched the interface become more bogged down and convoluted over the last few years. It used to be the height of simplicity. I wonder what decisions led things astray. I dual boot elementary OS on my MacBook, and am always astonished by how much faster it is. I rarely boot into OS X anymore, and am no longer excited about the next release. For the record my main production distro is Bodhi, and my servers run Debian and FreeBSD on extremely thin hardware - yet run extremely well, albeit they are headless.
I know all that is only partially on topic, but they are still good talking points.
Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
You may have a hard drive or hard drive data consistency issue... that is practically the only reason OS X UI hangs, the kernel scheduler makes sure of that.
Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
10.6 wasn't a free upgrade. $20 is cheap it was during the time when Apple was lowering prices. They aren't defrauding anyone the prices on the upgrades are made public and haven't changed.
I have to say thought that is $20 bothers you, you aren't a good fit for Apple. You'll get hit far worse on other things. You will be much happier in the skinflint world of Linux or Windows.
But all that went away when they ported to x86. Nowdays you can run it under virtualization, or if you're willing to limit your hardware choices a bit, you can build a "Hackintosh."
Last time I tried, it still limited your hardware, as it apparently only worked on intel chips (or was it boards?). Admittedly, It hasn't come back around to it on the "bored weekend" ringbuffer yet.
My wife recently upgraded her iPhone to iOS7. Of course nobody* told her it requires iTunes 11 to run. But her laptop is an old one running on 10.5.something. And guess what, iTunes 11 won't install on anything less than 10.6.8 or so.
Um Leopard (10.5) was released 6 years ago and was last updated supported in 2009. So as a geek, you haven't updated your wife's machine in 4 years. That means that it was vulnerable to security holes and bugs for 4 years.
Of course an upgrade costs $20. So now a supposedly free upgrade is going to cost $20, or else my wife won't be able to get pictures and stuff off her phone. Luckily it's not a PPC, otherwise she'd be really screwed. Just missed that by a few months.
The upgrade for Leopard to Snow Leopard has always been $29. The fact that you avoided it for years does not mean that you should get it for free. Also the fact that Apple still supports it even though it is now 3 versions older than the current says that Apple still works with older products.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
;)
Walmart is all about price and Apple isn't.
With regard to Walmart that is very apparent when it comes to things like bikes and sporting goods. What you buy there might be fine for the kids (maybe) or if intended for just occasional use but other than that, it's best to stay away. As far as bikes go, there are some online sources for good bikes at prices lower than what you'd pay at a traditional shop. You're giving up service and test rides but it's a good option for some people.
And for those that are interested, you can get good prices on refurb Apple equipment from Apple's online store. I've bought a few things that way and really the only thing you give up is the fancy packaging and the ability to take it home from the store that day.
You can run it in parallels, vmware fusion or virtualbox.
You need to remember that if Apple were to go back and offer the upgrade to 10.6.8 for free, the SEC would require them to re-starte their earnings for several years. Yes, I know what I'm talking about, and no, I'm not kidding. Since Apple has started to offer OS X upgrades for free, they are not allowed to count the full purchase price of Macs as income right away, but have to defer recognition of it until later years when the upgrades they're implicitly promising get delivered. Sigh.
...because (they claim - I don't know if this is true) their contract with Apple to allow distribution of their software through the app store prevents them from distributing installables any other way so they couldn't provide me with an installer for the earlier version.
Well, FYI, that is a bald-faced lie. They could send you the installer package any moment they decided to do so. (I am speaking as a business owner who distributes software through the Mac App Store.)
whoa, so why are they doing it? That sounds like a way to make taxes spread out and increase.
PS: I don't reply to ACs.
Apple Computer: on the brink of oblivion since 1975!
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
whoa, so why are they doing it?
My assumption is they're doing it to put pressure on Microsoft. But maybe that's too cynical, and they're really just doing it in order to decrease resistance to upgrades and get more of the "ecosystem" onto the latest release.
Didn't see anything about it, anyone else see something?
I am Homer of Borg, resistance is - Ooo Donuts!
those invited testers paid nothing to be download, test, and evaluate OS X betas.
You mean: those invited testers WERE paid nothing to download, test, and evaluate OS X betas.
Typically when a client wants me to test his product I'm getting paid. But I value my time and expertise (so do my clients), so YMMV.
Wait, what? Google owes me money for using their betas?
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
It doesn't require a host computer at all.
The OSX 10.6 upgrade always costed $20, only the later upgrades have been made free. Apple isn't trying to trick you out of $20.
It seems like you just maybe had a bad day.
with fries on the top? In other words, i would be happy to give it a try on common intel platforms instead of buying overpriced shiny hardware. But as all things Apple does, this time they think that its easier for them to charge for the privilege to outsource/push beta testing to the early adopters.
Roses are red, violets are blue, most poems rhyme, but this one doesn't...
You never used 10.4, did you?
Certain versions of 10.4 would randomly corrupt the filesystem such that files would start occupying the same chunk of disk space (crosslinked files, I think the term is?)
I saw someone get fired because of that bug (well, not really. She was fired because she was working on client files on her computer and not on the servers, which were backed up...and then the files were hosed by MacOS.)
I think it wasn't until 10.6 or so that many of the mystery problems (that cropped up and went away if you deleted+re-added something...printer, network interface, so on etc) were by and large solved.
10.7 and 10.8 are by and large rock solid. Any time someone comes to us complaining their Mac is crashing randomly, it's *always* a hardware failure. 10.9 is quite solid as well; I wish I could say the same for my late-2013 retina MBP. That and the changes to how MBP's sleep (no sleep indicator, and no way to separate "screen goes to sleep" from "computer goes to sleep", without hacking plists) pisses me off, but has yet to piss me off enough to get down to the Apple Store to have it looked at.
Please help metamoderate.
No. Google engineers call their products "beta" so users can't complain too loudly about bugs. That's like those people who spend hours cleaning their house before guests arrive and then say "please don't pay attention to the mess".
Then again, most of those Google products are free. Apple products, on the other hand, are not free, far from it; so it's amusing to see someone gloating about beta-testing overpriced products that look like KDE circa 2002 on their own time while the company is shoveling billions in offshore bank accounts.
lucm, indeed.
I suppose you don't vote either. After all, if the country really valued your input they'd compensate you for time spent evaluating candidates, just like you would be for time spent interviewing potential employees. Nevermind that you could benefit from influencing the result of the election (in an abstract sense).
Of course I vote. And voting does influence the result of an election (to some extent). One gets to choose if government policy will be influenced by the agro/financial/insurance lobbies or by the energy/military lobbies. The good thing is that lobbyists are good at marketing, so instead of being shipped to a foreign country to take over their oil and destroy their infrastructure so American companies can get juicy reconstruction contracts, one is "fighting the war on terror", and instead of being asked to pay more taxes to finance a program that forces expensive insurance down the throat of small business owners, one is "contributing to an universal healthcare program".
That my friend is called Freedom, and if you disagree with it the FBI will kick down your door at night and drag your ass to a secret jail, and if you ever get the chance to call someone while in jail the discussion will be recorded by the NSA and later wikileaked by russian spies and crossdressers.
lucm, indeed.
Unless there's a surfing spot at Yosmite that I'm not aware of, I doubt it.
Who at Apple said that the new naming convention is "California surfing sites" rather than "California locations"? We only have one data point so far, and that's insufficient to conclude that the locations will all be surfing sites (or named after dogs or located in San Mateo or Santa Clara county or...).
we get it - you don't like Apple.
The OP wasn't gloating - he was correcting an error in the summary.
You can go back to your secluded shack in the woods now.
When you say "we", who do you mean? Did you get elected as a spokesperson for all the idiots waiting in line at the Apple store when the company releases the same product over and over again, or are you just too insecure to make comments as an individual? Or is it both?
As for the secluded shack in the woods: I can't go back there, I sold it to a bunch of Apple fanbois who are convinced that the civilized world died with Steve Jobs. The market price for this kind of sack skyrocketed when the iPhone 5C was released.
lucm, indeed.
This is totally gonna drive Linux out of business.
Good to know. The ultimate solution in this case was to abandon their software and switch to something web-based so we could use any device with an internet connection. So really they just lost a customer out of it.
Good to know. The ultimate solution in this case was to abandon their software and switch to something web-based so we could use any device with an internet connection...
Good for you; definitely seems like the right move in this case ;-)
Thank you! Finally somebody else who finds this frustrating. That was one of my biggest concerns. Almost NOBODY else seems to think this is a problem. Not my wife, nor 99% of the people on the Apple forums. Wait, this is sad... I find the validation from a complete stranger on the Internet as comforting. Oh well.