1. 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 for purchase and download through Apple's Mac App Store, as part of a switch to releasing OS X versions online and every year, rather than every two years or so.
  2. Sep 21, 2020 Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5. An icon used to represent a menu that can be toggled by interacting with this icon.

With the release of the OS X Lion operating system for Mac computers, Apple ceased traditional distribution of physical retail discs and instead offered the OS as a download via the Mac App Store.

As announced late yesterday during Apple's fiscal 2011 third quarter earnings call. OS X 10.7 released today. It's yours for 30 bucks, if your Mac has Snow Leopard and Mac App Store installed. Otherwise, you're buying something more first, either OS X 10.6 or a new Mac.

Concurrent with Lion's release, Apple also updated MacBook Air with Intel Sandy bridge processors and Thunderbolt ports. Lion ships on all new Macs from today. Lion requires a Mac with OS X 10.6.8 to install and a Core 2 duo processor or later. If your Mac is Core duo, you're out of luck.

Never have I experienced a major operating system update as easy as this -- on a personal computer, anyway. I went to Mac App Store, stopped at the Lion page and clicked purchase. The software downloaded, prompted for password to install and did its thing (meanwhile I took a short shower). Lion was ready when I returned. It might have taken longer for Apple Mail to upgrade content and accounts than for Lion to install. I'll offer a full review later, but for now my initial first impressions are negative.

Apple imposes fundamental usability changes with regards to the user interface that you'll either like or despise. I started out writing a simple news story about Lion's release but lost so much time writing -- thanks to all these changes -- that my post is late and its content changed. This is the first OS X upgrade ever for which my first impressions are negative rather than glowingly positive.

New mail may shock you, likely. Frequent users of Apple Mail via MobileMe will find the interface mostly familiar. Others will be surprised at how different is the user interface. Don't worry, you can return to the old familiar motif -- and some people might want to. It's a matter of whether you're a 'sink or swim' personality or someone who goes a toe at a time.

Other changes are subtle at first. Lion has a new auto-save feature that looks handy, but will require some people (me among them) to adapt behavior. For apps supporting Lion's new auto-save feature there no longer is a 'save as' option. Apple has replaced it with 'save a version', while some applications, like Pages, offer 'save' but no longer 'save as'. However the 'duplicate' option has been moved to the File menu where it can replace 'save as'.

The Big One

There are plenty of other tweaks and features that require users to change their habits. For the rest of this post, I'll focus on one and put it in broader context.

Most of the usability changes are philosophical and support an Apple worldview about computers and mobile devices: The company is driving users to full-screen apps and trying to mimic the touchscreen experience of iOS devices. From that perspective, Lion radically differs from all other modern operating systems, with exception of Chrome OS, which only functions in full-screen mode. There is no desktop with Chrome OS. The two objectives are intertwined with respect to certain decisions Apple has made regarding how some very basic UI elements function differently. To that end, Apple takes something away: The scrollbar.

Well, the scrollbar isn't gone completely, it's just no longer persistent. It disappears. If the scrollbar reappeared when I moved my cursor -- say, across the screen -- I wouldn't have stumbled so badly over the UI changes. You may, too. What Apple wants you to do is change behavior: Scroll two fingers across trackpad or an Apple touch mouse to make the scrollbar appear.

Betanews founder Nate Mook and I got into a debate about this behavior. He likes the screen real estate gained by removing the scrollbar and sees the touch behavior as similar to iPhone, where there is no scrollbar. I disagree. On the iPhone I'm touching the display. It's a very different user experience, because the interaction is directly with the content. Here, I must look down and away to use the touchpad -- well, until there is muscle memory, I guess. Your eye is on the screen with iPhone -- or iPad or iPod touch.

'I haven't touched a scrollbar probably since 2006', Nate says. 'You're just an old man'. He's sadly right about that. 'Kids these days mostly use iOS, so this is a smart approach, I think. Kids will be more familiar with iOS than OS X'.

Anyone with a Mac laptop with trackpad that supports touch gestures -- and has been using them -- shouldn't have quite the trouble I did this morning. (Well, if they can get used to reverse scrolling, which lest I'm mistaken is new with Lion.) They'll be accustomed to two-finger scrolling, which brings back the scrollbar. But that's not everyone, and there are plenty of iMac users who either don't have Apple's touch mouse or don't use the touch features. By the way, the scrollbar is diminutive compared to previous Mac OS X versions, which is another reason to question hiding it. The scrollbar looks pretty much like it does on iOS 4.x.

App-Centrism

That brings me to full-screen mode, which is another reason for Apple doing away with the scrollbar. On iOS devices, there is only full-screen mode. Users never see the desktop unless they exit an app. But unlike iOS, users can slide fingers across the trackpad to move between full-screen apps, which definitely is handy. Again, this somewhat comes back to Nate's point about iOS familiarity and better unifying the user experience across devices. Maybe, but Apple also is asking Mac OS X users who might not have an iOS device -- surely that is many -- to change their behavior. I'll adapt, after cooling down from my initial reaction.

But I'll rightly grumble, while observing something else. Apple's approach here has yet another philosophical element worth observing. The modern Internet is about the browser and consuming content and services there -- and the latter includes applications. Apple doesn't want people using browsers, even though it offers a pretty good one. Applications sustain the iOS and Mac OS X ecosystems. As I explained in April 2010 post 'Clash of the titans: Apple, Google battle for the mobile Web', Apple and Google have clashing worldviews where for the one applications matter more and for the other the browser does: 'Apple and Google mobile device worldviews differ in two fundamental ways: Closed/tightly controlled versus more open/loosely controled and applications versus browser centricity'.

The hidden-scrollbar subtlety supports the application-centric approach, particularly in full-screen mode. The scrollbar is fundamental to browser functionality. It's a longstanding motif that supports how most websites present content. People reading content will find much of it below the fold. Many applications don't need scrollbars. Lion is more like one giant app, with respect to fundamental UI attributes. Where Microsoft incorporated Internet Explorer into Windows and Google made Chrome OS core operating system, Apple has fundamentally backed away from the browser motif as part of Lion's main presentation.

Perhaps my biggest surprise this morning came from switching to full-screen mode and getting stuck. I use Google Chrome and not Apple Safari. I got into full-screen mode but couldn't get out. The exit button doesn't appear in the upper right-hand corner and the escape key does nothing. So I tried some other third-party apps -- Firefox and Skype, among them -- in full-screen mode, but they don't support it at all. I guess that's better than getting locked into full-screen. Hey, but I did have persistent scrollbars in Chrome while writing this post. Well, what ya know.

(redirected from Mac OS X 10.7)
Also found in: Thesaurus, Encyclopedia.

li·on

(lī′ən)
n.
1. A large carnivorous feline mammal (Panthera leo) of Africa and northwest India, having a short tawny coat, a tufted tail, and, in the male, a heavy mane around the neck and shoulders.
3.
b. A person regarded as fierce or savage.
4. Lion See Leo.
Idiom:
lion's share
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin leō, leōn-, from Greek leōn, of Semitic origin; see lbʔ in Semitic roots.]
Word History: Old French lion is the source of English lion, and the Old French word comes from Latin leō, leōnis. The Latin word is related somehow to Greek leōn, leontos (earlier *lewōn, *lewontos), which appears in the name of the Spartan king Leonidas, 'Lion's son,' who perished at Thermopylae. The Greek word is somehow related to Coptic labai, laboi, 'lioness.' In turn, Coptic labai is borrowed from a Semitic source related to Hebrew lābī' and Akkadian labbu. There is also a native ancient Egyptian word, rw (where r can stand for either r or l and vowels were not indicated), which is surely related as well. Since lions were native to Africa, Asia, and Europe in ancient times (Aristotle tells us there were lions in Macedon in his day), we have no way of ascertaining who borrowed which word from whom.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

lion

(ˈlaɪən

Leo The Lion Mac Os Download

) n
1. (Animals) a large gregarious predatory feline mammal, Panthera leo, of open country in parts of Africa and India, having a tawny yellow coat and, in the male, a shaggy mane.
2. (Heraldry) a conventionalized lion, the principal beast used as an emblem in heraldry. It has become the national emblem of Great Britain
4. a celebrity or idol who attracts much publicity and a large following
5. beard the lion in his den to approach a feared or influential person, esp in order to ask a favour
[Old English līo, lēo (Middle English lioun, from Anglo-French liun), both from Latin leo, Greek leōn]

Lion

(ˈlaɪən) n
(Astrology) the Lion the constellation Leo, the fifth sign of the zodiac
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

li•on

(ˈlaɪ ən)
n.
1. a large, usu. tawny-yellow cat, Panthera leo, of Africa and S Asia, having a tufted tail and, in the male, a large mane.
3. a prominent or influential person who is sought after as a celebrity: a literary lion.
5. (cap.) a member of a Lions Club.
[1200–50; < Old French, variant of leon < Latin leōnem, acc. of leō < Greek léōn; replacing Middle English, Old English lēo < Latin]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
Noun1.lion - large gregarious predatory feline of Africa and India having a tawny coat with a shaggy mane in the male
king of beasts, Panthera leo
mane - long coarse hair growing from the crest of the animal's neck
big cat, cat - any of several large cats typically able to roar and living in the wild
genus Panthera, Panthera - lions; leopards; snow leopards; jaguars; tigers; cheetahs; saber-toothed tigers
lionet - a small or young lion
2.lion - a celebrity who is lionized (much sought after)
celebrity, famous person - a widely known person; 'he was a baseball celebrity'
3.Lion - (astrology) a person who is born while the sun is in Leo
individual, mortal, person, somebody, someone, soul - a human being; 'there was too much for one person to do'
astrology, star divination - a pseudoscience claiming divination by the positions of the planets and sun and moon
4.Lion - the fifth sign of the zodiac; the sun is in this sign from about July 23 to August 22
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

lion

noun
1.hero, champion, fighter, warrior, conqueror, lionheart, brave persona frail little man, but with the heart of a lion
2.celebrity, star, superstar, idol, wonder, notable, big name, prodigy, luminary, celeb(informal), megastar(informal), V.I.P.By the 1920s Kahlil Gibran was a social and literary lion.
lion's sharemajority part, most, bulk, greater part, preponderanceNuclear research has received the lion's share of public funding.
Related words
adjectiveleonine
femalelioness
youngcub
collective nounspride, troop
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

lion

noun1. A famous person:
celebrity, hero, luminary, name, notable, personage, personality.
2. An important, influential person:
character, dignitary, eminence, leader, nabob, notability, notable, personage.
Informal: big-timer, heavyweight, somebody, someone, VIP.
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
The
levlvice
leono
lõvi
oroszlán
ljón
ライオン
leo
lauva
lev
simba
Catalina

lion

[ˈlaɪən]
A.Nleónm (fig) → celebridadf
the lion's sharela partedelleón, la mejorparte
to beard the lion in his den
to put one's head in the lion's mouth
to throw sb to the lionsabandonar a algn a su suerte
B.CPDlion cubNcachorrom de león
lion tamerNdomador(a) m/f de leones
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

lion

nLöwem; he was one of the literary lions of his dayer war einer der bedeutendstenorgrößtenSchriftsteller seiner Zeit; to fight or battle like a lionkämpfen wie ein Löwe; to throw somebody to the lions(fig)jdn den LöwenzumFraßvorwerfen; the lion’s shareder Löwenanteil
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

lion

[ˈlaɪən]nleonem (

Leo The Lion Mac Os Official Site

fig) (person) → celebritàf inv
to get or take the lion's share →
to put one's head in the lion's mouth (fig) →
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

lion

(ˈlaiən) feminine ˈlioness noun
a type of large, flesh-eating animal of the cat family, the male of which has a long, coarse mane. leeu أسَد лъв leão lev, lvice der Löwe løve λιοντάρι león; leona lõvi شیر نر leijona lion, lionneאריה सिंह lav oroszlán singa ljón leone, leonessa ライオン 사자 liūtas lauva singa leeuwløve, løvinnelew نر زمرى leão leu лев lev, levica lev lav lejon, lejoninna สิงโต aslan 獅子 лев شیر sư tử 狮子
the lion's share
the largest share. die leeueaandeel حِصَّة الأسَد، الحِصَّه الكبيرَه лъвски пай a maior porção lví podíl der Löwenanteil broderpart η μερίδα του λέοντος la parte del león lõviosa بزرگترین سهم leijonanosuus la part du lion הָחֵלֶק הָאֲרִי सबसे बड़ा, अच्छा हिस्सा lavlji dio oroszlánrész bagian terbanyak bróðurparturinn la parte del leone 最大の分け前 가장 큰 몫 didžiausia dalis lauvas tiesa bahagian yang paling besar leeuwendeelbrorparten lwia część تر ټولو لويه ونډه a maior porção partea leu­lui львиная доля leví podiel levji delež lavovski deo lejonparten หุ้นใหญ่สุด en büyük pay 最大的份額 левова частка سب سے بڑا، بہترین حصہ phần lớn nhất 最大的份额
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

lion

أَسَدٌ lev løveLöweλιοντάριleón leijonalion lavleone ライオン 사자

Leo The Lion Mac Os Update

leeuwløvelewleãoлев lejon สิงโตaslan con sư tử狮子
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

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Leo The Lion Movie

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