Soon after the initial release of System 7, the 7.0.1 minor update was released in October 1991, which updated the Portable and Brightness control panels, added the Caps Lock extension - which showed an up-pointing arrow on screen if the Caps Lock key was depressed on PowerBooks - and added the Cache Switch control panel in addition to RAM disk and sound management optimizations for
68040 systems. Three small patches called "System 7 Tune-Up" also followed, which initially added the extension "System 7 Tuner" that improved memory management by quitting unused items, like applications and
AppleTalk, and added "minimum" and "preferred" memory allotments to an application's "Get Info" box in its 1.0 version. This would be followed by version 1.1, which included
LaserWriter driver version 7.1.1 and added a hidden extension called "Tuna Helper", intended to fix the "disappearing files" bug in which the system would lose files. The final release, 1.1.1, included everything 1.1 included but also added the
StyleWriter 7.2.2 printer drivers,
Chooser 7.1 and a minor update to Tuna Helper.
System 7.1 In August 1992, the 7.1 update was released. This is the first version of the system software that Apple charged money for. Of this change,
David Pogue wrote: New to 7.1 is the Fonts folder. This replaced the often time-consuming method of dragging fonts to and from the System file, introduced in System 7.0; it also replaced the
Font/DA Mover application from System 6, which could also be used with 7.0. System 7.1 also included a lot of internal changes to support the internationalization of dates, times, and numbers. It was also the first version to support "Enablers", which removed the requirement to release a new version of the system software every time new hardware was released. A set of specialized versions of 7.1, ranging from 7.1P1 to 7.1P6 (excluding 7.1P4) were created and included with various
Performa models that were already available or were released after 7.1. These specialized versions included
At Ease, Launcher, and some other changes that were integrated into later versions of the system software. The first major upgrade was System 7.1.1, also known as "System 7 Pro". This release was a bundle of 7.1 with AppleScript tools,
QuickTime and
Apple Open Collaboration Environment (AOCE). While System 7 had some trouble running on slightly older machines due to its memory footprint, System 7 Pro barely fit into any Macintosh computers of the time. It was most commonly used for its minor bug fixes rather than its new functionality. Apple co-founded the
AIM alliance (Apple, IBM, and Motorola) in 1992, shortly after the release of System 7 in 1991, and started developing
PowerPC-based machines that later became the
Power Macintosh family. Support for these machines resulted in System 7.1.2. System 7.1.2 was never offered for retail sale; it shipped with the first batches of the PowerPC Macs and a 68k version shipped with a small number of Quadra 600 series systems. Later shipments shipped with System 7.5 instead. System 7.1.2P was the same as 7.1.2 and shipped with the
Performa 630, LC 630, and Quadra 630 models that were released between July and November 1994.
System 7.5 On September 12, 1994,
System 7.5 was released with bug fixes from previous updates and several new features: • An updated startup screen with a progress bar • A new interactive help system called
Apple Guide • A clock in the menu bar (from the third-party freeware control panel SuperClock!) • An Apple menu item called
Stickies (formerly a third-party application called "PasteIt Notes"), which provided virtual
Post-It Notes •
WindowShade, another former third-party shareware control panel, provided the ability to condense a window down to its title bar. It was introduced as a "minimize" feature to compete with Windows 95 as Mac OS had no taskbar or dock. •
MacTCP was bundled, enabling any Macintosh to connect to the
Internet out of the box for the first time. • The
Control Strip (a fast way to change the system volume, control the playback of audio CDs, manage file sharing and printers, and change the monitor resolution and
color depth) was enabled on desktop Macintosh models for the first time. It had previously only been included with the PowerBook series. • A new Desktop Patterns control panel allowed for tiled patterns up to 128x128 pixels with 8-bit color; previous versions were limited to 8x8 pixel tiles with a maximum of eight possible colors. Similar functionality was found on earlier system versions exclusive to
Performa models and was housed in the General Controls panel. • The Extensions Manager (enabling the user to turn extensions and control panels on and off; also based on a formerly third-party control panel) •
PowerTalk, a system-level email handling service and the originator of the
Keychain system. • The Launcher, a
control panel containing shortcut buttons for frequently used programs (in a manner akin to the
macOS Dock) • A hierarchical Apple menu (folders within the Apple Menu Items folder would expand into submenus showing their contents. Again, based on a third party control panel; HAM by Microseeds publishing) • System-wide drag & drop for text and other data (selections can be simply dragged with the mouse and dropped to their new destination, bypassing the clipboard) • A scriptable Finder •
QuickDraw GX, a 2-D graphics rendering and geometry engine • For the PowerPC only, an advanced, 3d
Graphing Calculator, secretly developed at Apple by a former third party contractor • Support for
OpenDoc System 7.5 is codenamed "Capone", a reference to
Al Capone and "Chicago", which is the codename for Microsoft's
Windows 95 and is also the name of the default system font in Mac OS until version 8. System 7.5.1 is primarily a bug fix of 7.5 but also introduced a new "Mac OS" startup screen in preparation for
Mac clones. System 7.5.2, released only for the first
PCI-based Power Macs, introduced Apple's new networking architecture,
Open Transport. System 7.5.3 is a major bug-fix update that also included
Open Transport for other PowerPC-based machines and some 68k-based machines. 7.5.3 improved the 68k emulator, and added translucent dragging to the Drag Manager. It included the first version of
Control Strip to be compatible with all Macs. This was the first version of Mac OS to support
SMP (9500/MP). System 7.5.3 Revision 2 included performance enhancements; better reliability for PowerBooks using the third-party RAM Doubler program; improved reliability for PowerBook 500, 2300, and 5300 series computers with the PowerPC Upgrade Card; improved reliability when using the Startup Disk control panel; and improved reliability when copying files to 1 GB hard disks. System 7.5.3 Revision 2.1 was shipped with the
Performa 6400/180 and 6400/200; this particular release is specific to these machines as there was stability problems with System 7.5.3 Release 2 on the new hardware, especially with the video card and transferring files over LocalTalk.
Mac OS 7.6 Mac OS 7.6 (codenamed "Harmony") is the final major update, released in 1997. With 7.6, the operating system was officially called "Mac OS" instead of "System". New features include a revamped Extensions Manager, more native PowerPC code for Power Macs, more bundled Internet tools and utilities, and a more stable Finder with increased memory allocation. In this version, the
PowerTalk feature added in 7.5 was removed due to poor application support, and support for a large number of older Macintosh models was dropped, including those with a Motorola 68000 or 68020.
Mac OS 7.6.1 ported the 68k exception handling routines to PowerPC, turning type 11 errors into less harmful errors (type 1, 2, or 3, usually) as crashing applications would more often terminate safely instead of crashing the operating system. Through this period, Apple had been attempting to release a completely new "modern" operating system, named
Copland. When the Copland project was abandoned in 1996, Apple announced plans to release an OS update every six months until
Rhapsody (which would by 2001 evolve into what was released as
Mac OS X) shipped. Two more releases were shipped, now officially branded as Mac OS: Mac OS 7.6 and the minor bug fix 7.6.1. Future versions were released as
Mac OS 8–8.6 and
Mac OS 9–9.2. Released during a troubled time in Apple's history, 7.6 is known for several bugs, such as the inability to customize what components are installed to the system and its tendency to crash on some systems when they are shut down while a RAM disk is in use. ==Releases==