Apple releases new update for Mac OS X called Lion, and has features that will benefit everyone who uses a Mac, from artists to architects of internet marketing.

In designing the new operating system, Apple has a lot of inspiration from the iPad. An example is the use of gesture in the new OS.

If you have a trackpad, you will enjoy the new multi-touch, including the lead with three fingers to switch from one application to scroll through the app or web pages or documents as pages of a book.

You can scroll through a document as a Web page by sliding up and down on the trackpad. You can turn pages by sliding back and forth. To zoom out, simply pinch.

Full-screen apps take advantage of your large iMac screen, or make better use of the screen on your Macbook. This gives a simplified, much more iPad like experience on your Mac.
Now you can get immersed in an experience full screen while working in iPhoto, read mail, surf the web in Safari, or work in the pages of Apple.

One thing that separates the experience of users of a computer from a tablet is the number of things that the user often has been going on all at once. Mission Control in Lion gives a bird’s eye view of everything on your system, including applications, Dashboard, Exposé and Spaces.

Launchpad will be your entire screen of an app launcher. It can be invoked by simply clicking on the Dock of Mac OS, and you can see the app icons arranged in a grid on the screen above the desktop model.

Since you probably have too many applications to fit on one screen, you can browse through them, pushing the entire screen and switches to the next round of applications. You can organize applications in the collections of the screen, which Apple calls the “Folders” (but not to be confused with the folders in the Finder).

Want more programs? Mac App Store, you can browse and purchase thousands of apps, like you do on your iPhone and iPad.

Using the software is also improved. For example, applications to launch resume exactly as they were when they closed, all programs start automatically when you restart.

The versions are like “Time Machine to work,” auto-save your work in supported applications and allows you to restore previous versions.