Snow Leopard versus Windows 7
Neither Windows 7 or Snow Leopard try to reinvent the wheel, but both pack notable new features, large and small.
By Nick Mediati | PC World
Published: 16:37 GMT, 14 September 09
This is shaping up to be the autumn of new operating systems. The latest version of Mac OS X, Snow Leopard, started to ship to customers in August. Windows 7, the follow-up to the much-maligned Windows Vista, hits store shelves in late October. Neither operating system will drastically change the way you work.
Windows 7 builds on Windows Vista, smoothing out Vista's rough spots and bringing a number of new end-user features (such as the reworked taskbar) to the table. Meanwhile, with Snow Leopard, Apple focuses on new under-the-hood technologies that offer subtle refinements and fixes.
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Smart folders
Nothing in Snow Leopard directly compares with Windows' libraries. The closest OS X feature is saved searches (known as Smart Folders), but a saved search pulls together files based on search criteria, not location. You can't, for example, create a smart folder that contains all of the photos from two particular folders. On the other hand, you can't combine Windows 7 libraries with saved search results. Windows 7, of course, has a smart folder feature as well.
Republished with permission from PC World

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