

- Safari 5.1.7 lion download install#
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Snow Leopard is already being forced into obsolescence by an increasing number of software titles whose minimum requirement is 10.7.
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Mac Pro users have reason to be concerned.
Safari 5.1.7 lion download install#
I wonder what unpleasant surprises are in store when I install Mountain Kitty (10.8). Lion (10.7) was a further insult, disowning Intel Core Duo machine owners (notably the original 17" MacBook Pro…and now the 17" MacBook Pro itself apparently has been orphaned by Apple). Snow Leopard (10.6) broke new ground in forced obsolescence, immediately dispossessing all PowerPC users. That philosophy seems to have turned around with Leopard (10.5), which was bloated and somewhat obtuse. I suspect Apple is trying to tell me something there – I just haven’t worked out what it is yet.įollow on Twitter for the latest computer security news.įollow on Instagram for exclusive pics, gifs, vids and LOLs!īack when OS X was innovative, user-friendly, and still growing in its functionality - a philosophy that arguably peaked with Tiger (10.4) - I installed upgrades as soon as they became available.
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There’s no update to Safari or WebKit – Snow Leopard users stay at Safari 5.1.7.Īpple also published an iPhoto update at the same time: if you’re on Mountain Lion, as I am, you’ll find you have to go to 10.8.2 before you can get the “performance and stability improvements” promised by upgrading iPhoto.īy the way, the new version of OS X Mountain Lion was a 366MByte download iPhoto on its own clocked in at 373MBytes. On Snow Leopard, the security fixes don’t change the OS version. That’s a separate update, predictably called Safari 6.0.1.

Lion users also get a new point release, going to 10.7.5, but don’t get Safari 6.0.1 bundled in with it. The Safari update is critical, as it fixes data leakage vulnerabilities in the browser front-end, as well as potential remote code execution holes in WebKit, OS X’s core HTML rendering technology. Mountain Lion users move to 10.8.2, which includes an update from Safari 6.0 to 6.0.1. * The initials S, L and M denote that the vulnerability affects Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion respectively.Īs often happens with simultaneous upgrades to three different core versions of OS X, there isn’t a one-size-fits-all download you can apply. Here they are, coalesced into a single table: Component These latest OS X upgrades include 27 separately-documented fixes (not all of them apply to all OS X versions) overall, 95 different CVEs are dispatched, with 12 of the vulnerabilities annotated with the dreaded words “may lead to arbitrary code execution”.

In short, it looks like a case of “no known vices.”Īnd that raises the question, “Should I stay or should I go?” With a couple of working days plus a weekend under its belt, OS X Mountain Lion 10.8.2 – and its sibling upgrades, Lion’s 10.7.5 and Snow Leopard’s Security Update 2012-004 – don’t seem to have caused early adopters any major problems. Not quite as widely-hyped as iOS 6 was another system update that Apple released at the same time: OS X 10.8.2, the second major update to the Mountain Lion product. Together with the much-vaunted launch of the iPhone 5 last week came Apple’s public release of its latest mobile operating system upgrade, iOS 6.
