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It’s been a long-debated topic as to the pricing (and availability) of Apple’s next operating system release: Mac OS X 10.6 – a.k.a. Snow Leopard. However at the annual Worldwide Developer Conference in San Francisco Apple has (if you’ll excuse the pun) let the cat out of the bag and announced that Snow Leopard will be available in September for $29 (if you’re upgrading from Mac OS X Leopard), with Family Packs for up to 5 computers costing just $49 – again, if you’re upgrading from 10.5.

Long-touted as ‘just’ a behind-the-scenes update, Snow Leopard features support for Microsoft Exchange, a re-written Finder and an all-new QuickTime player with hardware acceleration and built-in YouTube uploading. There’s also a tonne of new developer technologies to allow developers to handle multi-processor machines with Grand Central, and an all-round speed increase for all the OS components.

Apple’s official web pages have yet to be updated with the pricing details or more information beyond the original holding pages, however in today’s WWDC keynote Apple confirmed dates, pricing and some more features – as well as confirming that Mac OS X Snow Leopard is indeed going to only run on Intel-based Macs.

If you’re running Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger on an Intel machine, the options are between a Mac Box Set (featuring Snow Leopard, iLife ‘09 and iWork ‘09) for $169 or 5-User Family Pack which brings you the iLife, iWork and Snow Leopard package for $229.

If you’re wanting to stay up to date on everything at WWDC, be sure to stop by our good friends at TUAW who’re covering the conference throughout this week.

Apple announces price and date for Mac OS X Snow Leopard originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 08 Jun 2009 14:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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