"It is the fifth beta release of Mac OS X 10.6.3" you state at the end of the last paragraph.
I've counted 4 releases so far:
- 10D522 on Jan-06-10
- 10D538 on Jan-22-10
- 10D548 on Feb-05-10
- 10D552 on Feb-09-10
Did I miss something?
What is interesting is the fact that 10.6.2 is 10C540 - does that mean, therefore, that 10.6.3 has been in development simultaneously to the development of 10.6.2? Was 10.6.2 simply pushed out to get the low hanging fruit but 10.6.3 was something where the big issues were corrected? it'll be interesting to see what is corrected given right now that Apple isn't specifying the 'security improvements' that apparently are coming in Quicktime X.
Yes, I already know that - they haven't reset the build number when they shift to a new branch so why is there a disaparity between the C and D branch? has the D branch be in development during 10.6.2 was when one considers the over lap.
Comments
"It is the fifth beta release of Mac OS X 10.6.3" you state at the end of the last paragraph.
I've counted 4 releases so far:
- 10D522 on Jan-06-10
- 10D538 on Jan-22-10
- 10D548 on Feb-05-10
- 10D552 on Feb-09-10
Did I miss something?
What is interesting is the fact that 10.6.2 is 10C540 - does that mean, therefore, that 10.6.3 has been in development simultaneously to the development of 10.6.2? Was 10.6.2 simply pushed out to get the low hanging fruit but 10.6.3 was something where the big issues were corrected? it'll be interesting to see what is corrected given right now that Apple isn't specifying the 'security improvements' that apparently are coming in Quicktime X.
D is 10.6.3 and 10D552 is build 552 of that.
10C540 means build 540 of the C branch (10.6.2)
D is 10.6.3 and 10D552 is build 552 of that.
Yes, I already know that - they haven't reset the build number when they shift to a new branch so why is there a disaparity between the C and D branch? has the D branch be in development during 10.6.2 was when one considers the over lap.