-
Website
http://eaves.ca/ -
Original page
http://eaves.ca/2009/10/15/my-new-mac-likes-and-dislikes/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Devin Johnston
4 comments · 4 points
-
Harley Young
26 comments · 1 points
-
Stephen Taylor
6 comments · 54 points
-
Facebook User
4 comments · 1 points
-
nickcharney
5 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
A Sad Day for Canadian Democracy
1 week ago · 19 comments
-
Eaves.ca Blogging Moment #7 (2009 Edition): Explaining the New to the Old
3 days ago · 3 comments
-
The Supreme Court of Canada: There are no journalists, only citizens
2 weeks ago · 11 comments
-
MuniForge: Creating municipalities that work like the web
1 month ago · 9 comments
-
Why David Suzuki Matters
3 weeks ago · 7 comments
-
A Sad Day for Canadian Democracy
A few tips that may be helpful:
1. In the Mac OS there is a concept called Services, which is not well known but fairly useful. For instance, if you select a file in Finder and choose Finder-->Services-->Mail you will see three options: Send File, Send Selection, and Send To (which copies the file path) to a mail message. Services are generally accessible from a wide range of applications. Many applications provide their own system wide services. On my system, for example, I have submenus for TextWrangler, Skype, WriteRoom, OmniFocus. I presume that you are using Snow Leopard, so you have the advantage of being able to customize and configure services and assigning keyboard shortcuts: http://www.macworld.com/article/142419/2009/08/...
2. I prefer Google Quick Search Box to Spotlight for both finding things and launching applications.
3 & 4. I no longer use Mail or iCal and prefer Gmail/GCal.
5. You can change what those keyboard shortcuts do in the Keyboard & Mouse section of System Preferences.
Let me know if you run into any other issues. Macs are very customizable in my experience, although it takes some practice to get the most out of your Mac.
Jesse
I've met a lot of people who have migrated to Gmail/GCal. I totally understand where you are coming from and can't seem to do it for two reasons. One, I like have my data on my machine, data I can back up and do what I want with (plus I haven't figured out how to sync my BB with gcal). But more importantly, I find Gmail frustrating because I can't sort mail by subject line or sender. This is critical because I get a lot of false positives in my junkmail folder with Gmail and the easiest way to scan junk mail is to sort my subject and then quickly delete anything that references a sexual organ, drug or dating service. I'd never thought that feature was important until Gmail took it away - and it seems to simple, I don't know why they don't add it. It's like they feel you should HAVE to search for your mail...
Anyway, again, thank you for that link and the advice... super helpful!
You can use your mac to surf the web (which looks better anyway), do graphic design and use interactive applications.
Use your PC for writing word docs and downloading music, because you're bound to get a load of viruses on it anyway.
2. Do a Command-Click instead of a Click on the spotlight results to open the containing folder.
3 and 4 I dunno :)
You can also do 2 from the keyboard with command-return on the result, which will open a finder window with the item selected. This also works in many applications that manage files, like itunes.
For 3, if the email contains a date and/or time, you can hover over that to get a small drop-down. This is called a data detector, and the menu will contain items for creating ical events using that info. Not quite what you're talking about, but a half step away.
For 4, I can't think of anything that would change that behaviour. I'd be a steak sandwich that in a few weeks you won't notice it anymore, though. The mind is way more fluid in habit forming and dropping than we expect.
Getting to the menu bar using the keyboard is control-f2, (control-fn-f2 if you're on a macbook).
Congrats on the mac.
1. Open Automator
2. Select "Service" template
3. Set "Service receives selected" to "Files or folders" in "Finder"
4. Drag the mail action "New Mail Message" into the area marked "Drag actions or files here to build your workflow."
5. Save it and call it "Send to"
6. In Finder select some files and right click. "Send to" should be there.
This should give you a rough example to polish.
Quicksilver!
it's also an app launcher.
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/14831
It *seems* daunting in the begining. But it's a tool I cannot live without.
Do you know where the thread under my original comment went? I see them in the RSS feed but not on page for the blog post. Odd.
Jesse