Can’t wait for OS X Mountain Lion to be released this summer? You can get many of the features of the next generation Mac OS X version right now. Whether you are running OS X Lion or to an extent, OS X Snow Leopard, read on to find out how to get everything from notifications, note syncing, synced reminders, iMessages, the simplified Safari UI, Twitter integration, AirPlay mirroring, and much more.
Get the Wallpaper – NGC 3190 Galaxy
First things first, let’s make OS X Lion look a bit more like Mountain Lion. The easiest way is to getOS X Mountain Lion’s lovely new galaxy wallpaper and set it as your default, click on the image below to download the full sized version. This is amongst the most basic thing you can do, but who doesn’t like a good wallpaper anyway?
Sign Up for iCloud
iCloud is deeply integrated into OS X Mountain Lion, from file save dialogue boxes to just the simple ability to sync things like Contacts, Reminders, Notes, music, apps, and more. The good new sis that much of this is already available to users of OS X Lion and iOS 5 or later. You should have set it up already, but if you haven’t done it yet, do it now and start syncing things between iOS and OS X now. It’s free, there’s no reason not to use it.
iMessages – Messages for Mac
iMessages has come to the Mac to replace iChat, allowing for unlimited communication and file transfers between Macs, iPad, iPhone, IPod touch, without ever using a single SMS. Messages for Mac is a public beta that is available to download right now from Apple. This will replace iChat, but you can always uninstall Messages and get iChat back if you want.
Notifications Center – Growl
OS X Mountain Lion brings Notifications Center from iOS to the Mac desktop. For OS X Lion users, you can mimic similar features by getting the free Growl fork for Lion to start getting notifications from compatible apps. Like Notifications Center’s alerts, Growl alerts will pop-up on the right-side of the screen, although there isn’t a fancy swipe gesture to reveal and hide the alerts panel like there is in OS X Mountain Lion, it’ll get the job done.
Unify Safari URL & Search Bar – Omnibar
Safari in Mountain Lion cleans up the UI and combines the URL and search bar into a single bar, much like Chrome. We’ve covered Omnibar before, you can either get the full-fledged SIMBL version or grab a Safari Extension directly from Apple’s Safari extensions site, just click on Search Tools, find OmniBar, and click “Install”.
- Get SafariOmbibar (requires SIMBL)
AirPlay Mirroring – AirParrot
AirPlay Mirroring is built into OS X Mountain Lion and will allow you to mirror your Mac screen to an Apple TV. This is a great feature, but rather than waiting, you can mirror your Mac elsewhere right now with the help of the AirParrot app. It costs $10 and is a cinch to set up, created by the same guy who built the Reflection app that mirrors iOS to Macs, that latter feature is lacking in OS X 10.8, however (fingers crossed).
GateKeeper
GateKeeper is Apple’s new initiative to prevent malware on the Mac. It does so by providing a choice to users to only allow apps from certified developers or the App Store. It’s not a necessary feature to use in OS X 10.8, but if you want to get something similar in OS X Lion there are a few ways to mimic this. The simplest way? Only download what you know is safe, either from reputable sources or from the Mac App Store. The hard way? This is a bit more technical, but anyone running OS X 10.7.3 can enable the basis of GateKeeper through System Policy Control right now, though the use is limited outside of developers. If you’re interested in the latter, here’s what to do:
sudo spctl -- enable
Disable system policy control command-line tool “spctl(8)”
sudo spctl --disable
If you don’t know what you’re doing, you should probably keep it disabled for now so you don’t accidentally prevent yourself from installing apps and get encumbered with developer logs. For the curious, you can read more about spctl at Apple.com.
Share Sheets
Share Sheets is OS X Mountain Lion’s built-in social functionality, allowing you to easily send a tweet, upload a picture, send a link to Safari’s Reading List, email and message just about anything, post pictures to Flickr, upload videos to Vimeo, and more. Share Sheets work from just about anywhere, and the simplest way you can mimic the feature now is to sign up for a Twitter account. Then grab the free Twitter for Mac client, (follow us there while you’re at it) and learn totweet from anywhere. You can take things further by adding Share Bookmarklets for your web browsers from Twitter and Facebook too.
Notes – Evernote
Notes in OS X Mountain Lion will sync the Notes app between Macs, iPhones, iPads, iPods, or all of the above. It’s a long great feature, but frankly the Notes app is a bit limited, and you can get an app with the same universal syncing functionality for free right now. Evernote is a free powerful app that seamlessly syncs just about anything you can store in the app between a Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or anything else running the Evernote app. The service is free as long as you upload less than 60MB of notes per month, which if you think about it, is a ton of notes.
Reminders – Wunderlist
The same Reminders app that is on your iPhone or iPad right now is coming to the Mac, and it will be synced through iCloud. Wunderlist does this and even exceeds some of Reminders features, it’s a free app that syncs task lists between Macs, PC’s, iPhones, iPads, you name it.
- Get Wunderlist for Mac free from the Mac App Store
- Get Wunderlist for iOS free from iTunes App Store
That just about rounds it out, if we missed anything or you can think of anything to add to this list, chime into the comments below! Of course, if you don’t want to mimic Mountain Lion, you can set up a dual boot between OS X 10.7 and OS X 10.8 and try it out yourself.