When Apple released OS X 10.6 in 2009, the server was an expensive and completely independent version of OS X, not only for Apple's rack-and-xserver system, but also for 1000 of dollars if it wanted to run on other Mac devices. By 2012, when the Xserver is dead, and OS X server can serve OS X users with an additional 20 dollars, we bid farewell to the powerful but complex tools used to manage and configure Server software, and usher in a feature that still retains its original function, But it is a single application that has been greatly simplified while inheriting the past. Despite years of spending, Apple is finally back to a dramatic change in its server hardware and software that once took place in Final Cut Pro. The company, at the expense of functional requirements of a subset of its professional users, has succeeded in making the new program a powerful tool for small businesses and ordinary high-end users.
The Mavericks version of OS X server has not changed that dramatically. In fact, the upgrade is closer to the incremental update that the Puma version gained in the current period last July when it was released. Despite the version number from 2. X has been added to 3.X, but OS X server is a complete overhaul. The positioning of the software has shifted from the past to an enterprise environment that is now better suited for advanced users and small businesses. Today, the transition is over, and it is clear that this slow but steady improvement will be the new normal in the next phase.