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OS X Mountain Lion

OS X Mountain Lion (version 10.8) is the ninth major release of macOS, Apple Inc.'s desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. OS X Mountain Lion was released on July 25, 2012,[3] for purchase and download through the Mac App Store, as part of a switch to releasing OS X versions online and every year, rather than every two years. Named to signify its status as a refinement of the previous OS X version, Lion, Apple's stated aims in developing Mountain Lion were to allow users to more easily manage and synchronise content between multiple Apple devices and to make the operating system more familiar.

Not to be confused with OS X Lion.

Developer

Closed, with open source components

July 25, 2012 (2012-07-25)

10.8.5 (Build 12F2560) / August 13, 2015 (2015-08-13)

With all-new features inspired by the iPad, the Mac just keeps getting better and better.

The operating system gained the new malware-blocking system Gatekeeper and integration with Apple's online Game Center and iCloud services, while the Safari web browser was updated to version 6. As on iOS, Notes and Reminders became full applications, separate from Mail and Calendar, while the iChat application was replaced with a version of iOS's Messages. Mountain Lion also added a version of iOS's Notification Center, which groups updates from different applications in one place. Integrated links allowing the user to rapidly transfer content to Twitter were present in the operating system from launch. Facebook integration was also planned but unfinished at launch date. It was released as a downloadable update later.


OS X Mountain Lion received positive reviews, with critics praising Notification Center, Messages, and speed improvements over OS X Lion, while criticizing iCloud for unreliability and Game Center for lack of games. Mountain Lion sold three million units in the first four days, and has sold 28 million units as of June 10, 2013, making it Apple's most popular OS X release. Mountain Lion was the last paid upgrade for an OS X major release, with OS X Mavericks and later being free. Apple later allowed free downloads of the OS, especially for customers of older and no longer officially supported Macintosh computers, starting on June 30, 2021.[4] The same practice was also applied to its predecessor, OS X Lion.

(Mid 2007 or later)

iMac

(Aluminum, Late 2008 or later)

MacBook

(Late 2008 or later)

MacBook Air

(Mid 2007 or later)

MacBook Pro

(Early 2009 or later)

Mac Mini

(Early 2008 or later)

Mac Pro

(Early 2009)

Xserve

The official system requirements of OS X 10.8 are 2 GB RAM, 8 GB available storage, Mac OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard) or later, on any of the following Macs:[15]


As in 10.7, the earliest models supporting AirDrop are the early-2009 iMac, late-2008 MacBook, late-2010 MacBook Air, late-2008 MacBook Pro, mid-2010 Mac Mini, and early-2009 Mac Pro with an AirPort Extreme card. Any Mac released in or after 2011 supports AirPlay Mirroring. Power Nap is supported on the mid-2011 or newer MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro with Retina display.[16]


The technical basis for these requirements is incompatibility with 32-bit EFI and 32-bit kernel extensions (most importantly, drivers for GPUs shipped in some older Macs). In order to prevent potentially incompatible systems from installing 10.8, the installer contains a whitelist of supported motherboard IDs. Users have bypassed these limitations so that 10.8 may run with varying functionality on some officially unsupported computers.[17]

was replaced entirely by iCloud, specifically in System Preferences options.

MobileMe

support in Mail and Safari was removed;[51] a message is shown to suggest to users that they search the Mac App Store for an RSS app.

RSS

The service was unified into the Mac App Store.[52]

Software Update

The list of updates installed in the past was removed.

[53]

The "Web Sharing" option was removed from System Preferences. is still included with the operating system and can be enabled using third-party software.[54]

Apache

When the app is opened, users are directed to the open source XQuartz project instead.[55]

X11

support was removed (including in OS X Server edition).[56]

Xgrid

The Display Preferences status menu was replaced by the AirPlay icon, and it is no longer possible to quickly switch resolutions without first opening up preferences.

[57]

The option in Menu Bar to display battery life using "Time" is no longer offered. Instead, the only option is to display battery "Percentage". However, battery time can still be viewed in the dropdown by clicking on the battery icon.

History of macOS

List of Macintosh software

at the Wayback Machine (archived October 18, 2013) – official site

OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion

at the Wayback Machine (archived September 2, 2012)

WWDC 2012 Keynote