

Tim shares a story about the time he made a mistake of wearing a Star Wars shirt, causing his meeting to go way overtime. The group discusses the wildfires out west. He talks about traveling on the ferry to do onsite work. So my opinion on OS X 10.11 is still, Caveat Emptor! And as always your mileage may vary.This week we welcome long time supporter of the show, Tim Pearson of Creative Techs. I have been able to adapt very well and find it easy to use but it was hell until I figured out about using the keyboard and where to click in the mailbox window.You can use your mouse to operate all the items in your mail's finder window as well as its tabs.in the message's window once the email message is open. Once you are in the mailbox widow you can use page up/page down to select a message and home to get back to the top. Clicking on a message at least three messages from the top of your mailbox window you use your up and down arrows to select a message and Command/o to open it.To get around this and keep it from happening you have to learn to use you keyboard again (geeky hun?) The HOME key is the fix if you have bottomed out. You cannot use your cursor to click on a mail message or on a column without finding yourself at the end of your mailbox.(?) It only gives me that message after the first time I run OS X and Mail. And after you let it restart it works fine. First, OUTLOOK 365 may say it has crashed and needs to restart.The only mail client that works is OUTLOOK 365.Īnd even OUTLOOK 365 has bugs, itemized below (but at least it doesn't crash and is usable.):

#OWC IFLASH SOFTWARE#
OUTLOOK 2010 also crashes on startup as does Apple Mail (still.) You would think Apple would see to it that their own software ran? Restart seems to be taking a lot longer than before.

Safari is now working everywhere I use it. Surfin' Safari.Īfter installing the latest beta version of OS X 10.11 yesterday, Apple has fixed only one issue I mentioned in my previous article. San Francisco is gorgeous, and a more consistent way to display it throughout apps and the web is just terrific. Using "-apple-system" also correctly interacts with the font-weight CSS property to choose the correct font on Apple's latest operating systems.īrowsers that don't support -apple-system will simply grab the next font specified in the property list. On iOS 9 and OS X 10.11, doing this allows you to use Apple's new system font, San Francisco. One of the ways to achieve this is by using the platform's system font, which is possible on iOS and OS X by using the "-apple-system" CSS value for the "font-family" CSS property. Web content is sometimes designed to fit in with the overall aesthetic of the underlying platform which it is being rendered on. If you make web apps or use web views and want to make sure they match, there's some good news coming your way. AppleCare Knowledge Base.Ĭoming with iOS 9 and OS X El Capitan is the new Apple system font, San Francisco (technically the SF branch). Once you adjust your preferences here, the Downloads folder should behave as it did before. You can also have the Stack display files by the name, kind, date added, date created or date modified. Other menu options here let you choose to display the Downloads folder as a generic folder icon or as a Stack, which shows a thumbnail of the first item in the folder. In the menu that appears, go to the View Content As area and select Fan.

To change back to the Fan view from the Grid view, right click on the Downloads folder in the Dock if you do not have a two-button mouse, hold down the Mac's Control key while clicking. The vertical column you had before is called the Fan view, but you can also display the folder's contents in the space-consuming Grid view of icons, or as a List of file names. The system gives you several ways to see the contents of your Stacks. As a timesaver, you can open a file directly from the Stack, instead of having to open the folder, find the file and then open the file. When you click on a Stack, it opens to reveal the folder's contents. In OS X parlance, those folders for Downloads and Documents on the right side of the Mac's Dock are called Stacks.
