Apple issues OS X 10.9.4 Mavericks beta to developers with bug fixes
One week after seeding the last OS X 10.9.4 Mavericks beta, Apple on Thursday issued to developers a new build of the upcoming maintenance update, with the latest version coming with minor bug fixes and minor tweaks.

The latest OS X 10.9.4 Mavericks build 13E25 continues Apple's usual one-week release interval and follows build 13E19 seeded last week.
Thursday's release focuses on the same areas, including Graphics Drivers, Safari, Bluetooth, Audio Drivers, Finder and the App Store.
The initial seed was issued at the end of May following the public release of OS X 10.9.3. Along with developers, Apple announced a limited number of consumers can also take part in testing out betas seeds.
Developers can download the latest builds via Apple's Developer Portal or Software Update.

The latest OS X 10.9.4 Mavericks build 13E25 continues Apple's usual one-week release interval and follows build 13E19 seeded last week.
Thursday's release focuses on the same areas, including Graphics Drivers, Safari, Bluetooth, Audio Drivers, Finder and the App Store.
The initial seed was issued at the end of May following the public release of OS X 10.9.3. Along with developers, Apple announced a limited number of consumers can also take part in testing out betas seeds.
Developers can download the latest builds via Apple's Developer Portal or Software Update.
Comments
Today is Wednesday
Not in some parts of the world...
I think the Mavericks slowdowns on Finder is as simple as al the side short ways to cloud options. If you only have like your HDD etc on the left side of Finder, everything goes smother.
@soundvision
I think the Mavericks slowdowns on Finder is as simple as al the side short ways to cloud options. If you only have like your HDD etc on the left side of Finder, everything goes smother.
But, to better reduce the slowdowns, it is important to use an SSD, instead of an HDD.
@soundvision
I think the Mavericks slowdowns on Finder is as simple as al the side short ways to cloud options. If you only have like your HDD etc on the left side of Finder, everything goes smother.
I am not sure what you mean by "the side short ways to cloud Options". I am really confused by the next statement "your HDD etc on the left side of Finder". What the heck?
In all my years of computing and developing I have never heard of the HDD being geographically located relative to the Finder. The HDD is a piece of hardware used for storage (of lots of small pieces) that is formatted to look like a bunch of little places to put pieces of files, the Finder is a tool used to help people abstractly think of all these pieces as whole files and folders with a hierarchical relationship to make it easier to organize. There is no left or right or up or down AFAIK? Possibly a language barrier?
So ... are you telling me Australians HDDs don't have all the data upside down?
I am not sure what you mean by "the side short ways to cloud Options". I am really confused by the next statement "your HDD etc on the left side of Finder". What the heck?
In all my years of computing and developing I have never heard of the HDD being geographically located relative to the Finder. The HDD is a piece of hardware used for storage (of lots of small pieces) that is formatted to look like a bunch of little places to put pieces of files, the Finder is a tool used to help people abstractly think of all these pieces as whole files and folders with a hierarchical relationship to make it easier to organize. There is no left or right or up or down AFAIK? Possibly a language barrier?
So ... are you telling me Australians HDDs don't have all the data upside down?
LOL ... I thought the HDD's spun in the opposite direction below the equator.