The install disks are "Universal", so to answer your question, "yes".Hi. Would a family pack purchase be compatible with both PowerPC and Intel? It looks like the sys reqs say either are required but wanted to make sure that one disc would work on either type of machine.
Just wait for OS X Elephant. (Gray and bloated. XI .. with the overly iTunesque gui brushed out?)
Yes, of course. But that doesn't change that any update through software update will still be Universal and contain both PPC and intel code. Plus all the languages. Of course it then actually _won't_ install most of the languages, but it'll still install both architectures. Or worse: It might not necessarily recognise the app you've slimmed down anymore and not update it at all? (Not sure with that, haven't actually used any deFATters.)
Either way: Apple certainly has a good system in place with their bundles and packages. There's still some way to go, though. You should be able to go about it this way, from a user-perspective:
1.) At install time, select whether you want to install "Universal" or "required architecture only".
2.) At install time, select what languages you want installed. (This is already in place.)
3.) Software Update should automagically only download updaters for your system, i.e. if you've got an intel-only, German-only system, it should download and install only intel-only, German-only updates. For the system, security updates *AND* application updates, btw.!
Giaguara: English (US)-only as an option would be _very_ inconsiderate. Towards German, French, Spanish, Chinese, English people etc., etc. ...
Not every one in the us will use the english / us only version (spanish will be a good second). Also in general you can select what you want to install (requires advance selection) and normally gives you the chance to include / exclude what you do not want.
I guess apple is smart enough to install only what is needed, in older OS version this was standard.
Also who cares about 50mb if you got 100gb harddisks available.
It will be a lot cheaper for apple to make one dvd as several dvd's and also distribution is a lot more complex. In europe we have a lot of different languages, so a retailer who need a lot of sets available (and also a lot of equal systems with different os - like countries with 4 languages spoken).
So do an advance install and most of the rubbish is gone.
Good luck, Kees
Yes, there is hard evidence: Leopard comes on _one_ DVD, for example.
Japanese is the second language for the market and numbers, French and German followed after that. Spanish isn't in tier 0 languages group, but followed after them in the next group.