- Email - Setting your default email application
- Apple operating systems - Quick closing of the navigation sidebar
- Apple operating systems - Moving a folder via its icon
- Apple operating systems - Moving files (not copying) across disks
- Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) - Setting the correct date format for all applications
- Apple operating systems - Customising the toolbar
- Apple operating systems - Quickly put your Mac to sleep
- Apple operating systems - 'Show Inspector' - advanced Get Info
- Apple operating systems - Quickly hide all windows/programs
- Apple - Hardware (excluding iPods and iPhones) - Zooming the screen on a flat-panel Mac
- Apple operating systems - Rotate desktop background
- Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) - Invert your screen to greyscale
- Apple operating systems - How to I install software from a .dmg file?
- iTunes - How do I import album art into iTunes 7?
- Apple operating systems - Setting paper to A4 size
- Printers - Using older printers with Mac OS X
- Apple operating systems - Deleting files that won't delete
- Safari - Safari keyboard shortcuts
- Browsers - Set the default Internet browser application
- Safari - Keyboard scrolling in Safari
- Disk Utility - How do I repair Disk Permissions?
- iCal - How do I get free SMS notifications from iCal?
- iCal - How do I have NZ statutory holidays put automatically into iCal?
- Networking - How do I configure a Woosh Wireless Modem to work with OS X?
Setting your default email application
Written by
Previously it was easy to tell the operating system which application you wanted to open and read your mail with by changing a setting in the System Preferences area. This setting is now hidden...inside Apple's default "Mail" program.
To switch to using a different program for viewing an sending email, launch the Mail program, go to the "Edit" menu and choose "Preferences". In the "General" section of the preferences window, you can change your default Email reader by selecting it or choosing in the pop-up menu as shown.
Last Updated Sunday, 09 March 2008
Quick closing of the navigation sidebar
Written byEvery folder window that opens in Mac OS X Panther has a sidebar that provides you with access to your hard-drives, network places, applications, documents and more. However, at times, you might want to hide the sidebar.
It is possible to click and drag on the line separating the two parts of the window, so that the sidebar disappears. But a faster way is simple....just double-click anywhere on the column separating the sidebar area and the main part of the window (you can see where to click by where the cursor is in the picture above) and the sidebar will close.
Last Updated Sunday, 09 March 2008
Moving a folder via its icon
Written by
When you are using a folder that is nestled deep in the dungeon of UNIX, you can simply move it to the desktop for faster consentient use. When its open in icon view, click and hold the folder icon on the upper title bar and then drag to the desktop. Magically the folder is now available from the desktop.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Moving files (not copying) across disks
Written byTraditionally, when you drag a file from one disk to another (or from one partition to another) the file gets copied to the new location and the original; remains where it is. This is frustrating at times, because when you want to move the file, you have to copy it across and then delete the original.
Instead, under OS X, there is a way to "move" a file rather than "copy" it. Simply hold the 'Command' (or 'Apple') key down before you click and drag the file to its new location. This will cause the file to be moved from one disk to the other and the file will disappear from its starting location.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Setting the correct date format for all applications
Written byThere is a quirk with Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) that means that not all programs will pick up the appropriate way to display a date if you switch from a date format setting such U.S. (month/day/year) to the New Zealand format (day/month/year).
In the image you can see below, the dates on the email program (1) are still in U.S. format, despite the fact that we have gone into System Preferences and the International panel, changed to the New Zealand region (2) and closed and opened the program again. The problem is hinted at in the warning that you can see (2) that indicates that only Unicode-compliant applications will pick up these settings and that all other applications will still use the last region setting that was used.
There are two ways that you can fix this. First, is to set the region to "Australia". This will make sure that the dates are displayed in the appropriate way (2) after you have made the changed, closed and then opened the program.
The second way is actually just a continuation of this approach and is really only necessary if you don't like the setting being "Australia", as it will have little impact on the actual running of the machine. Change the region setting to "Australia" and then change it to "New Zealand". That way, global settings with pick up the "Australia" settings first and Unicode-compliant applications will pick up the "New Zealand" option after that.
Last Updated Monday, 10 March 2008
Customising the toolbar
Written by
Every window has a toolbar of buttons at the top. these include buttons to change the view (icon, list and column) as well as search your computyer for file.
Also, a new button has appeared known as the 'Action' button for soing things like assigning colour lebls to files and folders. Now while these buttons can all be taken on and off this toolbar bu going to the "View" menu and choosing "Cutomize Toolbar...", what you may not know is that they can sit anywhere you want at the top of each window.
So, by holding down the 'Command' (or 'Apple') key, you can click and drag these icons around and place them on the left and right of the window in any order you want.
The moment you do that, all windows will take on the same look and placement of buttons. Even better for someone lime me, that doesn't have any need of the 'Action' button...you can hold down the 'Command' (or 'Apple') key and click and drag this button off the window and it will disappear in a puff of smoke. Any time you want any items back, you can go up to the "View" menu and choose "Customize Toolbar..." like before.
Last Updated Tuesday, 11 March 2008
Quickly put your Mac to sleep
Written byTo quickly put your Mac to sleep without using your mouse, press the following keys at the same time: Apple, Option and Eject.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
'Show Inspector' - advanced Get Info
Written byIn the Finder, press the Option key before choosing Get Info from the 'File' menu, and you will see it has changed to 'Show Inspector'. Say hello to the file Inspector! This is the 'Get Info' window on steroids; it remains open and shows info for any file you then click on in the Finder. This saves you from having to open & close multiple 'Get Info' windows if , for example, you are wanting to change the permissions for multiple files.
Last Updated Monday, 10 March 2008
Quickly hide all windows/programs
Written byEver had lots of programs and windows open at the same time, and want to hide them all quickly, to get back to the desktop? Try this: hold down Option and Command (Apple) keys and click the desktop. This will hide ALL currently running programs. Very quick and saves you from having to use Command H for each program.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Zooming the screen on a flat-panel Mac
Written byPretend your pokey 15-inch flat screen is really 22-inches or bigger. If you have Jaguar OS 10.2 or above you can. Press this combination of keys: 'cmd (apple key) & option & 8' to access this ability. Now you can zoom in on your screen using 'cmd & opt & +' keys, and zoom back out using 'cmd & op & -'
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Rotate desktop background
Written by
This is useful for people who are tired of their static backgrounds.
- Open System Preferences.
- Select 'Desktop'.
- In the Collection drop-down menu, select Pictures Folder or Choose Folder depending on where your pictures are.
- Check the Change Picture box and from the drop-down menu, select the interval between the change of picture. For a noticeable slide-show, try every 5 seconds.Now you have a changing slide-show in your desktop, just like a screen saver.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Invert your screen to greyscale
Written byPress 'Apple' and 'option' and 'ctrl' and '8'
Usefulness? Limited! But it's certainly fun. May be helpful if you want to take notes on your laptop in a dark lecture theatre.One potential use is that the screen is easier to read in low light, low screen power setting if it is set to greyscale. This will probably also help you to save battery power if you are using a Powerbook. It's also easier on your eyes.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
How to I install software from a .dmg file?
Written byA ".dmg" file is a disk image file. This is a series of files, an application or an application installer that is in a compressed format (to help with downloading off the net) that you can then 'mount' (load a temporary virtual disk) on your Mac to get the software from the disk image and onto your Mac permanently.
Let's take a look at installing the OmniWeb web browser. When you go to the Omni Group site, you'll download a ".dmg" file like the one you see here.



Variation 1 - An application that needs installing

Variation 2 - Clever dragging and dropping

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Some people mount a disk image and then try to use the application on the disk image from there, rather than dragging a copy of the application to their "Applications" folder. In most instances this is not a good idea.
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Some people forget they haven't made a copy of the application in their "Applications" folder, then find it hard to eject the disk image or wonder why the application has disappeared next time they start their computer. If you're having this problem, you probably didn't install correctly the first time.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
How do I import album art into iTunes 7?
Written by
Here are four ways that you can add artwork, with explanations as to the advantages and disadvantages of each. Note that I've ignored programs such as Clutter, which are a variation of the artwork collection and display approach. They are listed from the most recommended approach to the least.
Approach 1 - iTunes itself
iTunes 7 and above feature an option to import album artwork. This can be done on the basis of importing an entire library of songs artwork or on an individual song-by-song basis. The good thing is that if you have a number of songs from the same album in iTunes, it should figure this out and apply the same artwork to each song.
The advantage is that it can work through songs quite quickly and there is an easier way to change or remove artwork (right or control-click on a song and choose the option from a pop-up menu) making it easier to fix up mistakes. The disadvantage is if you have somehow manually added songs and their title and album cover names into iTunes, it may not find the right match.
Approach 2 - Widget search
The superb freeware dashboard widget Amazon Album Art Widget is specifically designed to try and track down album covers for you, usually offering many cover alternatives. If you see the right one, just click the widget to have it add the art to the current song playing in iTunes.
Approach 3 - Corripio
Corripio is a freeware/donationware program for fetching artwork and lyrics for songs from a number of sources. It is currently at version 0.7.2 which means the author still considers it under development and not worthy of being listed as Version 1. This is generally seen as acknowledgement that the software needs improving and you'll find that Corripio is a little buggy and there are some areas of the software that need improvement.

Using Corripio is very easy once you get the hang of it. Open up the application and it will load a list of your songs. You then select a song that you want to find the album artwork for (you can see an example in the image above) and then indicate how you want the program to search for a good match. In the example above, I've told it to search by album name for a Coldplay song.
Corripio has now searched for artwork and has shown me the various options that I have (in the example in the above, it's found the prefect match) so you just click on the image and click on the "Select" button. It will then assign that image to the song in iTunes.
But wait, if you've got a whole album in there, list them in order in Corripio, click the first song and then shift-click the last (in other words, select all the songs in that album) perform the search again and it will assign the artwork to all the songs.
Approach 4 - Search, drag and drop
The final suggestion is the most time consuming, but can solve the issue if the methods earlier can't find artwork for you. Go and find it yourself using your favourite search engine (such as Google)!
Then once you've saved the artwork image from a website to your Mac, start iTunes up, get the song playing (this is just the easiest way to indicate what song you are choosing in iTunes), from the "View" menu in iTunes make sure that "Show artwork" is selected and then drag the image file into the small window where the artwork is displayed.
In the example on the above, I've actually selected multiple songs that I want the same album image applied to.
Convinced you're not going to be able to find all that album art? Well one neat way to try and find as many matches as you can, is to upload your music list to this site (art4itunes.com) and get it to try and find the artwork for you. I was moderately pleased with the results.
Last Updated Monday, 10 March 2008
Setting paper to A4 size
Written byIf you're sick of changing your paper size from US letter to A4 go to the Applications Folder and open the Utilities folder. Double click 'Printer Setup Utility'. Go to The Printer Setup Utility menu and choose 'Preferences'. Choose A4 from the Default Paper Size pop-up. Then close the dialog box and you're done.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Using older printers with Mac OS X
Written byIf you are unable to print to your favourite (but maybe slightly older printer) go to http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net and get Gimp Print. It allows you to print to many printers not supported in OS X and you won't even know it's there.
Last Updated Tuesday, 11 March 2008
Deleting files that won't delete
Written bySometimes Mac OS X just doesn't want to delete files, this is away which you can delete files that normally wont delete through the trash can.
- Open up the Terminal
- type "rm -r" (Without the speechmarks. DO NOT PRESS RETURN)
- now find the file drag it into the Terminal and press return.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Safari keyboard shortcuts
Written by
In Safari, you can select the toolbar bookmarks by pressing cmd-1 through to cmd-9. However, it only works for the first nine bookmarks. The bookmarks bar isn't counted, and neither is are pop-down menus, such as the "news" menu in the default setup.
Last Updated Tuesday, 11 March 2008
Set the default Internet browser application
Written by
Previously it was easy to tell the operating system which application you wanted to surf the web with by changing a setting in the System Preferences area. This setting is now hidden...inside Apple's default "Safari" web browser.
To switch to using a different program for surfing the web, launch Safari, go to the "Edit" menu and choose "Preferences". In the "General" section of the preferences window, you can change your default browser by selecting it or choosing in the pop-up menu as shown.
Last Updated Tuesday, 11 March 2008
Keyboard scrolling in Safari
Written byWhen you're trying to read a long web page, do you scroll up and down with the scroll bar? Give away all that wrist-straining fine mouse movement and use the keyboard.
First, click on the page and then use the Space bar to scroll down and Shift-Space to scroll up. 'Command [' will take you back a page and 'Command ]' will take you forward.
You can get around very quickly with these few keyboard commands.
Oh, and in Internet Explorer use Space for down, Option-Space for up and 'Command [' and 'Command ]' for Back and Forward.
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November 1999
How do I repair Disk Permissions?
Written bySome suggest doing at Disk permissions repair on a regular basis, especially when installing new software.
- For Mac OS X 10.2 or later, open Disk Utility (/Applications/Utilities/).
- Select your Mac OS X startup volume in the column on the left of the Disk Utility window
- Click the First Aid tab.
- Click the Repair Disk Permissions button.
Users are advised to read Apple pages on the use of Disk Permissions:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25751
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106712
Some also advocate regular disk permission repairs (such as weekly) as a way to improve performance, although there isn't a consensus on this approach. The following is an excellent article worth reading and looking at the Pros and Cons of using disk permission repair...http://www.macworld.com/article/52220/2006/08/repairpermissions.html
Last Updated Friday, 25 April 2008
How do I get free SMS notifications from iCal?
Written byThis tip requires a small initial outlay for a piece of software that allows for syncing of iCal with Google calendars, but then allows you to receive free SMS texts of events in your iCal calendars.
You will need the following things:
1. iCal....free with all macs.
2. A Google account or an NZMac.com email account. Also free.
3. A copy of Busymac's Busy Sync...$25-30 NZ depending on the exchange rate.
Fortunately for New Zealand Google provides free SMS notifications of reminders in google calendar (as long as you are with Vodafone)
1. Download and install BusySync. This runs as a preference pane in the background. Follow the instructions to sync your iCal calendars with Google Calendar.
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2. There is a setting in BusySync that allows you to map reminders in iCal to SMS notifications in Google. Select that setting.
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3. Go to Google Calendar and go to "Settings" and then "Mobile Setup". Follow the instructions there to verify your cell phone.
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4. Marvel as your reminders in iCal are texted for free. Never miss an appointment again!
Bonuses
1. BusySync will also allow syncing of your calendars between macs in your house if you have a few, (you do need multiple copies unfortunately)
2. This is two way sync. Changing an event in Google is synced to iCal and vice versa. Great if you have a work computer that isn't your own.
Last Updated Friday, 25 April 2008
How do I have NZ statutory holidays put automatically into iCal?
Written byGo to the apple.com website, search for "New Zealand Holiday Calendar", select the first result (http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/calendars/newzealandholidaycalendar.html) , then click download.
The calendar does not include Easter dates and does not include provincial holidays.
Last Updated Friday, 25 April 2008
How do I configure a Woosh Wireless Modem to work with OS X?
Written byThe following are instructions on using your Woosh modem when away from home.
With the external modem you will generally need to use the power adaptor, particularly when connecting with the PPPoE cable.
You will need to set up a Network Location so that the Mac can tell the modem to connect. The Woosh Gateway does this automatically as part of its boot up process.
Mac OS X Instructions (version 10.3.8 and higher)
- Power on the Modem and connect it to your computer using the Ethernet Cable. Ensure that the cable's green light is lit
- From the Apple menu, select 'Location' > 'Network Preferences'
- In the 'Location' drop down box, select 'New Location'. In the Name field, type 'Woosh'. Click 'OK'
- In the drop down list next to 'Show' click 'Built-in Ethernet'. Select the 'PPPoE' tab, and tick the 'Connect using PPPoE' box
- In the 'Account' box, enter your full username (including '@woosh.co.nz') and password
- Click 'PPPoE Options', and tick 'Connect automatically when required'. Also untick both 'Prompt to stay connected if idle...' and 'Disconnect if idle...'. Click 'OK'
- Click on the 'Ethernet' tab. Select 'Manual' from the 'Configure' drop down box. Tick 'Custom' on the MTU option, and enter 1458 into the available box
- Click 'Apply Now'
All done, you should be able to connect to the internet anywhere there is a Woosh Signal.
Last Updated Sunday, 22 June 2008
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