Mac OS X Leopard
0 sources
Mac OS X Leopard
Summary
Mac OS X Leopard is an operating system[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of operating_system entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,370 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Mac OS X Leopard's instance of is recorded as operating system[3].
- Mac OS X Leopard's instance of is recorded as macOS[4].
- Mac OS X Leopard's instance of is recorded as UNIX 03[5].
- Panthera pardus is named after Mac OS X Leopard[6].
- Mac OS X Leopard's based on is recorded as Darwin[7].
- Mac OS X Leopard followed Mac OS X Tiger[8].
- Mac OS X Leopard was followed by Mac OS X Snow Leopard[9].
- Mac OS X Leopard's developer is recorded as Apple Inc.[10].
- Mac OS X Leopard's part of the series is recorded as macOS[11].
- Mac OS X Leopard's copyright license is recorded as Apple Public Source License[12].
- Mac OS X Leopard's copyright license is recorded as end-user license agreement[13].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.8[14].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.0[15].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.1[16].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.2[17].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.3[18].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.4[19].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.5[20].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.6[21].
- Mac OS X Leopard's software version identifier is recorded as 10.5.7[22].
- Mac OS X Leopard's platform is recorded as PowerPC[23].
- Mac OS X Leopard's platform is recorded as IA-32[24].
- Mac OS X Leopard's platform is recorded as Q272629[25].
- October 26, 2007 marks the founding of Mac OS X Leopard[26].
- Mac OS X Leopard was published on October 26, 2007[27].
Body
Publication
Mac OS X Leopard was released on October 26, 2007[27]. Its part of the series is recorded as macOS[11].
Subject and Themes
Mac OS X Leopard's part of the series is recorded as macOS[11].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Mac OS X Leopard followed Mac OS X Tiger[8]. It was followed by Mac OS X Snow Leopard[9].
Why It Matters
Mac OS X Leopard ranks in the top 5% of operating_system entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,370 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]