"OS X"@en . "thumb|Logo de la proxima versi\u00F3n: OS X YosemiteOS X, antes llamado Mac OS X, es un sistema operativo basado en Unix, desarrollado, comercializado y vendido por Apple Inc. Ha sido incluido en su gama de computadoras Macintosh desde el a\u00F1o de 2002. OS X es el sucesor del Mac OS 9 (la \u00FAltima versi\u00F3n del Mac OS Classic), el sistema operativo de Apple desde 1984. Est\u00E1 basado en BSD, y se construy\u00F3 sobre las tecnolog\u00EDas desarrolladas en NeXT entre la segunda mitad de los 80's y finales de 1996, cuando Apple adquiri\u00F3 esta compa\u00F1\u00EDa. Desde la versi\u00F3n Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard para procesadores Intel, el sistema tiene la certificaci\u00F3n UNIX 03.12 La primera versi\u00F3n del sistema fue Mac OS X Server 1.0 en 1999, y en cuanto al escritorio, fue Mac OS X v10.0 \u00ABCheetah\u00BB (publicada el 24 de marzo de 2001). Para dispositivos m\u00F3viles Apple produce una versi\u00F3n espec\u00EDfica de OS X llamada iPhone OS, en 2009 se ha cambiado el nombre por iOS, que funciona en iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad y Apple TV. Los nombres de las versiones de Mac OS X tienen nombre de grandes felinos. Por ejemplo: Mac OS X v10.7 es denominado \u00ABLion\u00BB, hasta que en la versi\u00F3n 10.9 se dej\u00F3 de poner nombres de felinos a nombres de localizaciones de California, por ejemplo: Mac OS X v10.9 es denominado Mavericks. En Mac OS X, la X denota el 10 en n\u00FAmero romano y constituye una parte prominente de la identidad de la marca debido a que la versi\u00F3n es 10.0. La variante para servidores, Mac OS X Server, es arquitect\u00F3nicamente id\u00E9ntica a su contraparte para escritorio, adem\u00E1s de incluir herramientas para administrar grupos de trabajo y proveer acceso a los servicios de red. Estas herramientas incluyen un servidor de correo, un servidor Samba, un servidor LDAP y un servidor de dominio entre otros. Viene preinstalada en Apple Xserve, aunque puede ser utilizado en la gran mayor\u00EDa de computadores actualmente distribuidos por el fabricante. Pocos juegos de Sonic fueron compatibles para Mac, pero esos juegos solo se consigue en la tienda online y virtual App Store."@es . "thumb|Logo de la proxima versi\u00F3n: OS X YosemiteOS X, antes llamado Mac OS X, es un sistema operativo basado en Unix, desarrollado, comercializado y vendido por Apple Inc. Ha sido incluido en su gama de computadoras Macintosh desde el a\u00F1o de 2002. OS X es el sucesor del Mac OS 9 (la \u00FAltima versi\u00F3n del Mac OS Classic), el sistema operativo de Apple desde 1984. Est\u00E1 basado en BSD, y se construy\u00F3 sobre las tecnolog\u00EDas desarrolladas en NeXT entre la segunda mitad de los 80's y finales de 1996, cuando Apple adquiri\u00F3 esta compa\u00F1\u00EDa. Desde la versi\u00F3n Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard para procesadores Intel, el sistema tiene la certificaci\u00F3n UNIX 03.12"@es . . . "yes"@en . "OS X"@en . . . "Multi-lingual"@en . . . . . . . . "OS X"@ko . "340px OS X\uC740 \uC560\uD50C\uC5D0\uC11C \uC81C\uC791\uD55C OS\uC785\uB2C8\uB2E4."@ko . "PowerPC: versions 10.0 through 10.5.8\n IA-32: versions 10.4.4 through 10.6.8\n x86-64: versions 10.4.7 through 10.8"@en . . . . "If you ask about Apple OS X games on /v/, you're going to get drowned in trolls. We'd like to apologize for that: sorry. Damn near every major game made for Microsoft Windows also has an OS X version these days, so check that out until we can get /v/ to give a straight answer, and write this page. For games from before OS X came out, check the Macintosh page. Also, Unix and Mac users should look into Wine. It usually supports Windows games and it's free. By the way, it's pronounced \"o-s-ten\". Yeah, the X is a 10, roman numerals n' shit. Also, it's no longer called \"Mac OS X\" since 10.8."@en . . . "OS X, whose X is the Roman numeral for 10 and is a prominent part of its brand identity, is built on technologies developed at NeXT between the second half of the 1980s and Apple's purchase of the company in late 1996. The 'X' is also used to emphasize the relatedness between OS X and UNIX. Versions 10.5 \"Leopard\" running on Intel processors, 10.6 \"Snow Leopard\", 10.7 \"Lion\" and 10.8 \"Mountain Lion\" have obtained UNIX 03 certification. iOS, which runs on the iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, and the 2nd and 3rd generation Apple TV, shares the Darwin core and many frameworks with OS X. An unnamed variant of v10.4 powered the first generation Apple TV. OS X originally ran on PowerPC-based Macs. In 2006, the first Intel Macs had a specialized version of 10.4 \"Tiger\". In 2007, 10.5 \"Leopard\" was the first to run on both PowerPC and Intel Macs with the use of Universal Binaries. 10.6 \"Snow Leopard\" was the first version of OS X to drop support for PowerPC Macs. Mac OS X 10.7 \"Lion\" was the first version of OS X to drop support for 32-bit Intel processors and run exclusively on 64-bit Intel CPUs. The server edition, OS X Server, was architecturally identical to its desktop counterpart, and included tools to facilitate management of workgroups of OS X machines, and to provide network services. Starting with v10.7 \"Lion\", OS X Server is no longer offered as a separate operating system product; instead, the server management tools are available for purchase separately, and are preloaded on the server models of Mac Pro and Mac Mini along with OS X."@en . . . "thumb|230px|OS X na oryginalnym macbooku OS X (dawniej Mac OS X) \u2013 system operacyjny firmy Apple, przeznaczony dla komputer\u00F3w z rodziny MacIntosh. Jest to nast\u0119pca klasycznych system\u00F3w z rodziny Mac OS."@pl . . "thumb|230px|OS X na oryginalnym macbooku OS X (dawniej Mac OS X) \u2013 system operacyjny firmy Apple, przeznaczony dla komputer\u00F3w z rodziny MacIntosh. Jest to nast\u0119pca klasycznych system\u00F3w z rodziny Mac OS."@pl . . . "340px OS X\uC740 \uC560\uD50C\uC5D0\uC11C \uC81C\uC791\uD55C OS\uC785\uB2C8\uB2E4."@ko . . . . . . . . "Closed source"@en . . "OS X, whose X is the Roman numeral for 10 and is a prominent part of its brand identity, is built on technologies developed at NeXT between the second half of the 1980s and Apple's purchase of the company in late 1996. The 'X' is also used to emphasize the relatedness between OS X and UNIX. Versions 10.5 \"Leopard\" running on Intel processors, 10.6 \"Snow Leopard\", 10.7 \"Lion\" and 10.8 \"Mountain Lion\" have obtained UNIX 03 certification. iOS, which runs on the iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, and the 2nd and 3rd generation Apple TV, shares the Darwin core and many frameworks with OS X. An unnamed variant of v10.4 powered the first generation Apple TV."@en . . "Mac OS X, whose X is the Roman numeral for 10 and is a prominent part of its brand identity, is a Unix-based graphical operating system, built on technologies developed at NeXT between the second half of the 1980s and Apple's purchase of the company in late 1996, in combination with technologies from Apple's \"classic\" OS and technologies from FreeBSD. From its sixth release Mac OS X 10.5.0 \"Leopard\" and onwards, every release of Mac OS X gained UNIX 03 certification while running on Intel processors."@en . . . "The Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc. since 2001."@en . "Current"@en . "OS X"@es . . . . . "300"^^ . . . "Screenshot of OS X Mountain Lion"@en . . . . "Personal computing"@en . . . . . . "Hybrid"@en . . "If you ask about Apple OS X games on /v/, you're going to get drowned in trolls. We'd like to apologize for that: sorry. Damn near every major game made for Microsoft Windows also has an OS X version these days, so check that out until we can get /v/ to give a straight answer, and write this page. For games from before OS X came out, check the Macintosh page. Also, Unix and Mac users should look into Wine. It usually supports Windows games and it's free. By the way, it's pronounced \"o-s-ten\". Yeah, the X is a 10, roman numerals n' shit. Also, it's no longer called \"Mac OS X\" since 10.8."@en . . "Graphical"@en . . . "Mac OS X, whose X is the Roman numeral for 10 and is a prominent part of its brand identity, is a Unix-based graphical operating system, built on technologies developed at NeXT between the second half of the 1980s and Apple's purchase of the company in late 1996, in combination with technologies from Apple's \"classic\" OS and technologies from FreeBSD. From its sixth release Mac OS X 10.5.0 \"Leopard\" and onwards, every release of Mac OS X gained UNIX 03 certification while running on Intel processors. The first version released was Mac OS X Server 1.0 in 1999, and a desktop-oriented version, Mac OS X 10.0.0 \"Cheetah\" followed on March 24, 2001. From 10.0 through 10.8, releases of Mac OS X were named after big cats: for example, Mac OS X 10.6.0 is usually referred to by Apple and users as \"Snow Leopard\". The server edition, Mac OS X Server, is architecturally identical to its desktop counterpart, and includes tools to facilitate management of workgroups of Mac OS X machines, and to provide access to network services. These tools include a mail transfer agent, a Samba server, an LDAP server, a domain name server, and others. It came pre-loaded on Apple's Xserve server hardware, but can be run on almost all of Apple's computer models made after 1999. Apple also produces specialized variants based on Mac OS X's core, \"Darwin,\" for use on four of its consumer devices: iOS for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad, as well as a separate variant for the Apple TV."@en . . . . . . . . . "125"^^ . "The Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc. since 2001."@en . . . "OS X"@pl . . .