Apple's Snow Leopard Server backs iPhone clients

By Agam Shah, IDG News Service |  Operating Systems Add a new comment

Apple has revealed further details of the new Mac OS X Server software, adding
support for a new file system and collaboration tools designed for businesses
looking to use the iPhone as a client device.

The new server OS, code-named Snow
Leopard Server
, is built on the Unix OS and is an upgrade to Mac OS X 10.5
Server, code-named Leopard Server.

The server software was announced Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference,
where Apple also revealed a few details of a new client OS, code-named Snow
Leopard.

The Snow Leopard Server improves on existing collaboration tools from the older
Leopard server software, allowing tools like wikis and blogs to be designed
for viewing on the iPhone, Apple said. The new server OS includes a feature
called "My Page," providing clients a central place to access Web
applications.

The new server software also adds support for the ZFS
file system
, which was originally designed by Sun for use in the Solaris
OS. The 128-bit file system will provide capabilities to pool storage, expand
volumes and automatically correct errors, according to Apple.

A new Mail Server includes an overhauled engine to better handle connections.
Targeted at small businesses, the mail server improvements include better server-side
e-mail rules and vacation messages. Snow Leopard Server also has a new Address
Book Server, which is based on open standards and allows clients to share contacts
and calendars.

The Snow Leopard Server's updated Podcast Producer 2 has a new workflow editor
for users to create and publish podcasts, Apple said. Another new feature on
the software is the Podcast Library, through which users can create a podcast
store and sell locally stored podcasts through RSS.

Beyond multimedia enhancements, the new server OS is designed to better support
processor cores, which lays the groundwork to enable better system performance
through future versions of Mac OS X Server software, Apple said.

Multicore systems are driving system performance, and the Snow Leopard Server's
Grand Central technologies help the server software better allocate tasks across
multiple cores while saving power, Apple said. Developers can use Grand Central
to develop and optimize programs for multicore systems, Apple said.

Developers will also be able to enhance application performance through Snow
Leopard's OpenCL (Open Compute Library) technology, which can redirect data
processing from a CPU to a graphics processing unit (GPU). The processing speeds
of GPUs are approaching a trillion operations a second and "they're capable
of considerably more than just drawing pictures," Apple said on its Web
site. The technology could be useful for development of genomics and video-encoding
applications, Apple said.

The Snow Leopard Server's new 64-bit kernel technology allows a server to "theoretically"
have up to 16T bytes of memory, which can boost system performance and allow
for more network connections.

ITworld LIVE

Operating SystemsWhite Papers & Webcasts

White Paper

A Comparison of PowerVM and VMware vSphere (4.1 & 5.0) Virtualization Performance

This technical white paper presents benchmark results showing greater VM consolidation ratios than demonstrated in previous benchmarks and demonstrating the extent of the performance lead that PowerVM virtualization technologies deliver over x86-based add-on virtualization products.

White Paper

Consolidating Lotus Domino x86 Workloads on IBM Power Systems

Read the white paper to learn how moving up to Lotus Domino 8.5 and consolidating with IBM Power Servers can help you boost performance results and ROI.

White Paper

Task, workflow & issue management for teams. Try free!

Need a flexible system for managing team tasks, issue tracking, and automating and managing workflow processes? Comindware® Tracker helps you do it all.

Webcast On Demand

Best Practices in Monitoring VMware

The benefits of virtualization are unassailable: increased agility, scale, and cost savings to name a few. However, so too are the monitoring challenges posed by these environments-including complexities, lack of visibility and control, and inefficiency.

Sponsor: Nimsoft

White Paper

How Nimsoft Service Desk Speeds Deployment and Time to Value

For years, many support teams have been hamstrung by their traditional service desk platforms, which require complex, time-consuming coding for virtually every aspect of customization. This complexity makes it costly and difficult for support organizations to adapt-and places an increasingly substantial burden on the agility and efficiency of the business as a whole.

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question