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Desktop

Apple hasn't quite grown tired of advertising about the changes in the interface that have been introduced with Leopard, and rightly so. The new interface looks chic and at the same time does not compromise on readability and ease of use. It's mostly just shades of grey, but the gradients and added shadows give it a more 3D look, and of course the typical Mac icons that are always the envy of the Windows users.
Apple has modified the Dock in a way that the icons appear to be placed on a reflective glass shelf when the Dock is positioned on the bottom of the screen. A light glows next to the icons of currently-running programs which is quite neat.

Folders or files, when dragged on to the Dock, are placed as an icon on it (called Stacks). On clicking the icon, you have its contents either fan out or open as a grid to be viewed.
The number of items fanning out from a stack depend on your preference. The Downloads stack automatically captures files downloaded from Safari, Mail, and iChat, while the Documents stack keeps presentations, spreadsheets, and word processing files. You can create as many stacks as you wish by dragging folders to the right side of the Dock. All this does sound and look really cool but when it comes to folders containing lots of documents, stacks aren't as useful.
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