Snow Leopards can see 6x better than humans, their smelling is nothing special, but their nasal cavity is very large, which warms up the air they breathe before it enters the lungs, which is critical in the high altitude of the Himalayas.
Wander around and explore. See, smell, listen and remember.
The snow leopard has a gestation period of 90-100 days. To read more about the snow leopard on Answers.com, see the Related Link.
Snow Leopard is an upgrade to Leopard and so you will need Leopard installed on your Mac before installing Snow Leopard. For Mac computers with an Intel processor running Tiger you will need to purchase the box set that includes iLife 09 and iWork. (See links below)
Genetically, the snow leopard's closest relative is the tiger (which also happens to partially overlap with the snow leopard's habitat, for instance in the mountains of Bhutan). Compare the facial structure of the two cats and you'll see the similarity.
cubWild cats bear 'cubs'.
No, it is not a good place for a snow leopard to live in South and East Central Asia, you see, in the snow leopard's name, it has the word snow in it.In South and East Central Asia, it is very hot and dry.Snow leopards have to live in snow.Or else, they can't survive.:(
a snow leopard Dazzle camouflage ; see relevant link .
To ensure full compatibility with Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) it is best to install the latest version of LimeWire 5.3. (See links below)
Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) is able to run both 32 Bit and 64 Bit software seamlessly. (See links below)
yeah.. you will have to download the language pack, most prob it will be on the official website. or.. you could check another ox snow leopard(a friend's preferably) and see how to change the language
5,000 inches away
Snow Leopard and Windows 7 are two completely different types of operating system. You cannot use software written for Mac OS X (Snow Leopard) on a computer using Windows 7 (or vice versa). On a Mac you can run both operating systems so you can run Windows 7 instead of Mac OS X or in a separate window on top of Mac OS X (Snow Leopard) using Parallels or Fusion (See links below).