Trees (LD40) Mac OS

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The Macintosh project began in 1979 when Jef Raskin, an Apple employee, envisioned an easy-to-use, low-cost computer for the average consumer.He wanted to name the computer after his favorite type of apple, the McIntosh, but the spelling was changed to 'Macintosh' for legal reasons as the original was the same spelling as that used by McIntosh Laboratory, Inc., an audio equipment. Download for Mac OS X. Also available for Windows. A free Git client for Windows and Mac. Sourcetree simplifies how you interact with your Git repositories so you can focus on coding. Visualize and manage your repositories through Sourcetree's simple Git GUI. Simple for beginners.

Every major version of Mac OS X macOS has come with a new default wallpaper. As you can see, I have collected them all here.

While great in their day, the early wallpapers are now quite small in the world of 5K and 6K displays.

If you want to see detailed screenshots of every release of OS X, click here. Heart heist mac os.

If you are looking for Mac OS 9 wallpapers, this page is for you.

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10.0 Cheetah & 10.1 Puma

The first two releases of Mac OS X shared the same wallpaper. The sweeping blue arcs and curves helped set the tone of the new Aqua interface.

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10.2 Jaguar

Jaguar took the same Aqua-inspired theme but added some depth and motion to things. In my head, the trails streaking across the screen were from a set of comets.

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Trees (ld40) Mac Os X

10.3 Panther

While Panther inflicted Macs everywhere with Brushed Metal, its wallpaper stayed on brand, refreshing the original 10.0 image.

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10.4 Tiger

Many consider Tiger to be the best 'classic' version of Mac OS X. While that may or may not be true, it is my favorite Aqua-inspired wallpaper.

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10.5 Leopard

Complete with a revised, unified user interface and shiny new Dock, 10.5 broke the Aqua mold. As such, Leopard was the first version of OS X to break from the Aqua-themed wallpaper. It ushered in the 'space era' of OS X wallpapers, which was used heavily in the new Time Machine interface as well.

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10.6 Snow Leopard

The 'no new features' mantra for Snow Leopard didn't ban a new wallpaper, thankfully. This starscape is still one of my favorites.

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10.6 Snow Leopard Server

The server version of Snow Leopard came with its own unique wallpaper that is a real treat:

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10.7 Lion

Lion kept up the space theme, this time showing off the Andromeda galaxy. The space nerd in me likes the idea, but the execution of this one leaves dead-last on my list of favorites.

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10.8 Mountain Lion

Just like Snow Leopard before it, with Mountain Lion, Apple opted to clean up and revise the existing theme as opposed to changing directions for what would be a less-impactful release of OS X.

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10.9 Mavericks

Mavericks marked the beginning of Apple's 'California location' naming scheme for Mac releases. The wave depicted looks as intimidating as the ones in the famous surfing location.

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10.10 Yosemite

Yosemite brought another UI refresh to the Mac, making things flatter and more modern. The wallpaper ushered in a new era based on … well … mountains.

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10.11 El Capitan

Named after a breathtaking spot in Yosemite National Park, El Capitan was a clean-up year after 10.10.

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10.12 Sierra

More mountains.

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10.13 High Sierra

Even more mountains.

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10.14 Mojave

No more mountains! Mojave brought a new system-wide Dark Mode, and the OS shipped with two versions of its default wallpaper to match. Users could even have macOS slowly fade between the two background images over the course of the day.

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10.15 Catalina

macOS Catalina brought big changes to the Mac, including the ability to run iPad apps natively, opening the platform up to a much larger number of developers than ever before. Catalina shipped with multiple variants of its default wallpaper, and the ability to shift between them as time progresses throughout the day:

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macOS Big Sur

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This version of macOS is such a big deal, Apple changed the version number to 11.0. It will be the OS that brings support for Apple Silicon-powered Macs, and features a brand new design.

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Mac Os Mojave

Every so often, I'll run across something I find useful, and yet I have only the vaguest sense of exactly how it works. Today's Geeky Friday tip falls into that category—it's a one-line Terminal command to display the structure (i.e. all the sub-folders) of any given folder.

Trees (ld40) Mac Os 11

There are many ways to get this information in the Finder (or via third-party programs), but I've found it useful when remotely connecting to other Macs, or when I want a quick reminder of a folder's structure while working in Terminal.

The command outputs an indented list showing all the sub-folders within the current folder, and it does so very quickly, even on large folders.

Here's the command:

To use it, simply cd into the directory whose structure you'd like to see, then run the command. If you use it a lot, you might want to put it in your user's .bash_profile file as an alias—just prefix the above command with alias mytree=', and then add the closing double-quote ( ' ) at the end. Save the file, and the next time you open a Terminal window, you'll be able to simply type mytree to see the tree structure. Here's an example of the output it creates:

As I noted in the intro, I can't tell you exactly how this works, because I really don't know myself. It relies heavily on sed, a Unix program that can transform text in a multitude of ways ( man sed will give you a brief overview of its capabilities). I do know that the first bit, find . -type d, tells the system to find all directories (folders) at or below the current level. After that, though, the magic starts with sed, replacing characters as necessary to create the formatted output.

You can do other things with the output, of course. Append | more at the end to have it scroll by one page at a time, for instance. Or append > ~/Desktop/my_folders.txt at the end to send the output to a file on your desktop.

Trees (ld40) Mac Os Download

Although I usually prefer to understand exactly how the Unix commands I use accomplish their tasks, in this case I've decided that the usefulness of the command outweighs my desire to become an sed wizard to understand it!





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