schaef2493 said:It should cost as much as Tiger right now; there will be no upgrade price unless you buy your mac within like a week of the release. Although EDU pricing will be available.🙂
Edit: Beat me!
gnasher729 said:To be more precise, all Apple operating systems for sale have always been upgrades - it just wasn't printed on the package. So for Leopard, you are going to pay exactly the same upgrade price as for Tiger, Leopard or Jaguar. And this time, it will say "upgrade" on the package.
Should Apple decide to produce a non-upgrade version as well for people who don't own Tiger, I would expect it to cost something like $399, whereas Macintosh users will pay $129 for an upgrade.
I 2nd this notion.WildCowboy said:This is not true...all retail versions of OS X allow both full installs and upgrade installs at the same price. You do not have to have a prior version of OS X in order to install from the discs.
gnasher729 said:To be more precise, all Apple operating systems for sale have always been upgrades - it just wasn't printed on the package. So for Leopard, you are going to pay exactly the same upgrade price as for Tiger, Leopard or Jaguar. And this time, it will say "upgrade" on the package.
Should Apple decide to produce a non-upgrade version as well for people who don't own Tiger, I would expect it to cost something like $399, whereas Macintosh users will pay $129 for an upgrade.
WildCowboy said:This is not true...all retail versions of OS X allow both full installs and upgrade installs at the same price. You do not have to have a prior version of OS X in order to install from the discs.
milo said:But at this point, 10.5 will probably only run on machines that shipped with OSX. In theory, if you can find a machine that runs it but still only has OS9 on it, you could install it. But there aren't really any of those left, so pretty much every user buying 10.5 will be upgrading an earlier version of OSX.
milo said:You can look at it as all upgrade or no upgrade, but it's really the same thing - there's only one category of person buying, so there's only one price.