Apps that are ready for anything. So you are, too.

It comes with apps for sending email, managing your schedule, making video calls and backing up your Mac automatically. It even comes with an app for shopping for new apps. With OS X Mountain Lion, your Mac is more than full-featured, it’s fully loaded.

iPhoto. The best way to organize, edit and share your photos.

iPhoto is an easy-to-use photo application that makes it fast and fun to organize and find your pictures, as well as make them look their absolute best. With features like Faces, Places and Events, iPhoto helps you keep track of your photos by who’s in them and when and where you took them — all in an immersive full-screen view. Quick and simple editing tools let you make so-so shots picture perfect with just a few clicks. Photo Stream in iCloud automatically pushes new photos to all your devices, so you’re never without your latest shots.1 And if you feel like showing off what you’ve captured, iPhoto lets you share with beautiful photo books and letterpress cards or online via Facebook and Flickr. Learn more about iPhoto

See more of every shot as you view and edit your photos in full-screen mode.

Share your photos with Facebook friends or update your profile picture — right from iPhoto.

iMovie. Turn your home movies into home blockbusters.

Don’t settle for boring home movies. With iMovie, you can transform the videos you shoot into your very own indie flicks. Create a Hollywood-style trailer that’ll make your audience laugh, cry and cheer for more. If you know how to drag and drop, you can make a movie in iMovie. It comes with Apple-designed themes that look fun and professional. Just choose one and iMovie does the rest, adding animated titles and sophisticated transitions automatically. Customize your screen gem further with your own words and audio. Learn more about iMovie

Make your very own Hollywood-style trailers with iMovie.

GarageBand. Creating great-sounding songs is as easy as 1, 2, 3, 4.

Whether you’re musically gifted or mostly curious, GarageBand is the application for you. Plug in your electric guitar or USB music keyboard and get ready to rock with virtual replicas of the most revered amps and stompboxes in the world, as well as over 100 software instruments. Just because you didn’t grow up learning your A, B and C sharp doesn’t mean you can’t. Basic Lessons teach you just that: the basics. Choose from 40 lessons that cover blues guitar, rock guitar, classical piano, pop piano and more. Or get a private lesson from one of your musical heroes, like Sting or Death Cab for Cutie, with Artist Lessons.2 GarageBand even tells you how well you’re playing in real time with a feature called “How Did I Play?” Learn more about GarageBand

Groove Matching brings all your tracks together beautifully — even the ones that are out of rhythm.

Flex Time lets you quickly change the timing of your recording to fix mistakes or extend a riff.

Mac App Store. Get apps for your Mac from your Mac.

Just like shopping the App Store on iPad and iPhone, the Mac App Store offers endless possibilities to browse and purchase apps on your Mac. New apps install in one step right to Launchpad. And the Mac App Store lets you know when app updates are available, so you always have the latest versions. Learn more about the Mac App Store

Download thousands of apps from the Mac App Store straight to Launchpad on your Mac.

Calendar. It’s ahead of its time.

Keep track of your busy schedule and share it with others using Calendar. Create separate calendars — one for home, another for school, a third for work and so on. See all your calendars in a single window or choose to see only the calendars you want. Calendar lets you create invitations using information from Contacts, update your guest list, keep track of responses and receive the latest status information. When you or another Mac user receives a Calendar invitation via Mail, it’s automatically added. Calendar also works with iCloud, Yahoo! and Google. And when you use iCloud, every Calendar edit you make on your Mac automatically appears on your iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. So no dinner dates are missed, no meeting goes unattended and no anniversary is forgotten.

See all your calendars in a single window. Or choose to see only the calendars you want.

Contacts. Great with names. And faces.

Contacts is a flexible and convenient place to store information for everyone you know. It’s easy to import names, numbers, addresses and photos from other applications. And it’s designed for Facebook, too. Contacts automatically includes your friends’ profile photos and information. And when friends update their information, Contacts updates your Mac. You can create smart groups for clubs, activities and business purposes; print address labels and envelopes; and more. iCloud updates your contacts on your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch and Mac — so when you enter someone’s contact info once, you have it everywhere. And since Contacts is built on vCard, an industry standard for storing contact information, your friends can send you cards that you can add simply by dropping them into your contacts list — no typing required.

When you add, delete or edit a contact, iCloud updates your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch and Mac.

Time Machine. Built-in backup.

Time Machine works with your Mac and an external hard drive or Time Capsule (sold separately). Connect the drive, assign it to Time Machine and start enjoying some peace of mind. Time Machine automatically backs up your entire Mac, including system files, applications, accounts, preferences, music, photos, movies and documents. But what makes Time Machine different from other backup applications is that it not only keeps a spare copy of every file, it remembers how your system looked on any given day — so you can revisit your Mac as it appeared in the past.

Browse by date to see how your system looked at any previous time. And restore your Mac with a click.

FaceTime. Make your smile go further.

FaceTime for Mac makes it possible to talk, smile and laugh with anyone on an iPad, iPhone, iPod touch or another Mac from your Mac.4 So you can catch up, hang out and stay in touch with a click. Just find who you want to see in Contacts and start a FaceTime call. And when someone wants to reach you, the call rings through on every Mac you own, even if FaceTime isn’t running. So you never have to worry about making yourself available. If you don’t want to receive calls, just turn FaceTime off.

Make video calls to anyone on an iPhone, iPad, iPod touch or another Mac — from your Mac.

Photo Booth. Say “cheese,” then smile.

Take fun snapshots and make short videos in Photo Booth. Right from there, you can share what you shoot on Facebook and Twitter. Use photos as your Messages icons. Assign them to friends and family in Contacts. And add photos to your iPhoto library. But the real fun starts when you use the effects and backdrops. Snap a photo of yourself at the Eiffel Tower or in outer space. Choose from nine effects that use facial tracking technology so effects look great whether you’re front and centre — or left of centre. Snap single photos or shoot multiples in a four-photo burst. You can even shoot and trim video clips, complete with effects. And see your Photo Booth photos full screen.

Take quick snapshots and film short videos. Even add fun effects.
  1. iCloud requires iOS 5 or later on iPhone 3GS or later, iPod touch (3rd generation or later), iPad or iPad mini; a Mac computer with OS X Lion or later; or a PC with Windows Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 8 (Outlook 2007 or 2010 or an up-to-date browser is required for accessing email, contacts and calendars). Some features require iOS 6 and OS X Mountain Lion. Some features require a Wi-Fi connection. Some features are not available in all countries. Access to some services is limited to 10 devices.
  2. Artist Lessons are sold separately through GarageBand in select countries.
  3. iCloud Tabs on iOS devices requires iOS 6.
  4. FaceTime video calling requires a FaceTime-enabled device for the caller and recipient and a Wi-Fi connection. Availability over a cellular network depends on carrier policies; data charges may apply.