0

What I mean by equivalent is whether or not I can treat a Golden Master release as a final version. Like... can it update to the final, final version? And continue to have update capabilities?

So if I do have a Golden Master release (for Lion, for instance) do I still have to buy the version Apple sells?

4 Answers 4

3

The Gold Master version is essentially the final version, but there may be some very very minor discrepancies between the GM and the actual final release, but not ones big enough that you should worry about not having the latest version.

As for your question about updates, I assume that you will be able to receive updates like normal, but I don't have any experience with this so I can't say for sure. The same goes for buying the release version, I doubt you'll have to, because Mac OS lacks any sort of copy protection/licensing, but again I don't have any experience with using a GM so I can't say for sure.

2

Generally speaking in my experience, the "Golden Master" is the version of the software that will be supplied to retail / distribution, there should be no distinction.

2

A Gold Master is the copy of something that will be used to create all other copies. The concept comes from physical media which can be copied through physical processes (for example, stamping a CD, although the term is much older than that). The Gold Master is the original copy. A negative "cast", called a matrix, of it is taken, and this matrix is used to produce a number of working masters. These masters are what are used to produce the working matrices which will be used to produce the actual CDs.

So, when you get a copy of the Gold Master, it indicates that the publisher is confident that the software won't change any more, and is willing to start duplicating physical media*, along with the capital outlay that implies. Unless an absolutely show-stopping bug is found, the Gold Master will be the initial release version, as changing it would require recall, destruction and replacement of any media already produced. Any bugs that are found at this stage would be fixed in the *.1 release.

*Apple aren't going to be creating many Lion DVDs, but they will be creating and installing the disk images for their computers that will ship with Lion, and they won't want to have to re-do them.

1

You still have to buy the version Apple sells in order to have a license to use it.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .