SAN JOSE, Calif. — Apple Inc.’s next-generation operating system, Mac OS X “Leopard,” will be available Oct. 26 for $129, and Apple’s online store is taking pre-orders, the company said Tuesday.
Leopard was originally due in June, but Apple said in April that it needed to divert resources so it could launch the much-anticipated iPhone on time. Such product delays are rare for the Cupertino-based company.
Leopard, which the company says will offer more than 300 new features, is the sixth major upgrade Apple has made to Mac OS X since the desktop operating system debuted in 2001.
One of the new features is “Boot Camp,” which lets users install Microsoft Corp.’s Windows on Intel-based Macs, though both operating systems can’t run at the same time. The feature, in a test version released last year, already has helped attract new customers to the MacÂintosh platform.
Apple revenues have hit record highs for the past year, and Apple’s share of the PC market has grown. Analysts expect Apple’s strategy of introducing products that work with Microsoft’s Windows software to further boost computer sales.
Market researcher Gartner Inc. said Apple surpassed Gateway in the second quarter to become the third-largest computer vendor in the U.S. with a 6.4 percent slice of the market, up from 5 percent in the same year period a year ago.
Apple senior vice president of worldwide marketing Phil Schiller said he expects existing Apple users will move quickly to adopt Leopard — in contrast to Microsoft’s experience with its latest Windows operating system overhaul.
When Microsoft launched Vista, its first major upgrade to Windows in five years, in February, compatibility issues led some customers and computer makers to return to the older Windows XP. Industry analysts say Vista has not significantly fueled PC sales.
Gartner analyst Michael Silver views the new features on Leopard as “incremental improvements,” but gives Apple credit for making the upgrade process easy and making the changes visible.
“Time Machine,” for instance, is an automated backup system in Leopard that enables users to flip through old versions of a file in a 3D layout similar to the “Cover Flow” interface on Apple’s iTunes music software.
“Vista has interesting backup features,” Silver said. “But who knows about it? It’s hidden. Apple is using this 3D interface to exploit it.”
Consumers and schools remain Apple’s main market focus, but businesses aren’t being ignored: A version of Leopard for servers will launch at the same time as the consumer version, Apple said.
Apple shares rose $2.60, or 1.56 percent, to close at $169.58 Tuesday.
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