Hello maccrawj,

Friday, June 5, 2009, 1:17:02 PM, you wrote:

> OSX is not unix based, it's partially derived from it and several other 
> things like
> nextstep.

> JRS wrote:
>> I also use Unix-based OS X every day as well.  :)


Both right - both wrong:

FROM:       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_OS_X

History
Main article: History of Mac OS X

Mac OS X is based upon the Mach kernel.[8] Certain parts from FreeBSD's and 
NetBSD's implementation of Unix were incorporated in Nextstep, the core of Mac 
OS X. Nextstep was the object-oriented operating system developed by Steve 
Jobs' company NeXT after he left Apple in 1985.[9] While Jobs was away from 
Apple, Apple tried to create a "next-generation" OS through the Taligent, 
Copland and Gershwin projects, with little success.[10]

Eventually, NeXT's OS—then called OPENSTEP—was selected to be the basis for 
Apple's next OS, and Apple purchased NeXT outright.[11] Steve Jobs returned to 
Apple as interim CEO, and later became CEO again, shepherding the 
transformation of the programmer-friendly OPENSTEP into a system that would be 
adopted by Apple's primary market of home users and creative professionals. The 
project was first known as Rhapsody and was later renamed to Mac OS X.[12]

With each new version, Mac OS X evolved away from a focus on backward 
compatibility with the earlier versions of Mac OS, toward an emphasis on 
"digital lifestyle" applications such as the iLife suite, enhanced business 
applications (iWork), and integrated home entertainment (the Front Row media 
center).[13] Each version also included modifications to the general interface, 
such as the brushed metal appearance added in version 10.3, the non-pinstriped 
titlebar appearance in version 10.4, and in 10.5 the removal of the previous 
brushed metal styles in favor of the "Unified" gradient window style.[14][15]


-- 
Regards,
 joeuser - Still looking for the 'any' key...

"...now these points of data make a beautiful line..."

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