On CBS MoneyWatch: 6 things NOT to do on Twitter, Facebook
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

August 28th, 2009

The impact of installing Rosetta on Snow Leopard (Spoiler: none)

Posted by Jason D. O'Grady @ 11:18 am

Categories: 10.6, Rosetta, Snow Leopard

Tags: Apple Macintosh, Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp., Rosetta, Microsoft Office, Office Suites, Software, Jason D. O'Grady

As I tweeted on August 17, installing Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac requires the installation of Rosetta, which is now an optional install in Snow Leopard.

If you already have Office 2008 installed on your Mac, no extra installation is required. Rosetta is only required to install Office, not run it. The Microsoft Office installer is still a PPC application. No word yet from Microsoft as to if or when an Intel-native Office 08 installer is coming.

Apple notes that Rosetta “dynamically translates most of your PowerPC-based applications to work with your Intel-based Mac. There’s no emulation. No second-class status. It looks and feels just like it did before. On a Mac, you’d expect nothing less.”

My wingman here at The Apple Core David Morgenstern notes that the Nisus file translators for .doc files were coded for PowerPC and will also require Rosetta.

Despite Apple’s assurances I was reluctant to install to Rosetta for fears of slowing down my MacBook Pro, but I need needed to install Microsoft Office. What to do?

Needing Word for a book deadline, I bit the bullet and installed Rosetta and, to my surprise, I noticed no appreciable performance loss whatsoever. The good news is that Rosetta runs only when needed, otherwise it isn’t even loaded. It’s also pretty small, weighing in at only 2MB.

Despite early reports to the contrary, if you’re worried about having PowerPC code on your Mac you can uninstall Rosetta. According to Dan Lozz on the Apple Discussion boards:

Looking at the file list of the ‘Optional Installs.mpkg’ on the Snow Leopard DVD it looks as though the only file installed for Rosetta support is an executable called ‘translate’ installed in ‘/usr/libexec/oah/’ so deleting that file and removing Rosetta’s receipt entry from ‘/Library/Receipts/InstallHistory.plist’ should get rid of it.

Before installing Snow Leopard I recommend doing a full, bootable backup and checking your mission critical applications with the Compatibility Checker that is posted on Wikidot.

Jason D. O'GradyJason D. O'Grady is the editor of PowerPage.org, which has been publishing daily mobile technology news since December 1995. For disclosures on Jason's industry affiliations, click here or to view Jason's full profile click here.

Email Jason D. O'Grady

Subscribe to The Apple Core via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 1 Talkback(s)
Rosetta Installation  macprolynx | 09/05/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement
Click Here

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Smart Tech Expert advice on innovations in healthcare and the green technologies that make it happen. Find out more
  • Smart Business Discussion and advice on management issues that revolve around making your world smarter and more useful. More Smart Advice
  • Smart People The best and worst moves in the management and strategy trenches. Learn More