Chapter 3. Basic OS X Housekeeping

In This Chapter

  • Copying, moving, and duplicating files

  • Deleting and recovering files

  • Renaming files

  • Finding specific files

  • Locking files

  • Using Apple menu commands

  • Using Services, the Go menu, and menu icons

  • Listening to audio discs and recording data discs

  • Printing within Mac OS X applications

After you master basic Mac spell-casting — things like selecting items, using menus, opening and saving documents, working with windows, and launching an application or two — it's time to delve deeper into Mac OS X. (Can you tell I'm a Dungeons & Dragons old-timer?)

In this chapter, I discuss file management, showing you the hidden power behind the friendly Apple menu. I also discuss some of the more advanced menu commands, how to print within most applications, and how to listen to an audio CD on your MacBook. (It makes a doggone good stereo.) Finally, I introduce you to the built-in CD/DVD recording features within the Big X and adding a standard USB printer to your system.

The Finder: It's the Wind beneath Your Wings

So what exactly is the Finder, anyway? It's a rather nebulous term, but in essence, the Finder gives Mac OS X the basic functions that you use for the procedures I outline in this chapter. This multitasking uber OS has been around in one guise or another since the days of System 6 — the creaking old days when a Mac was an all-in-one, toteable computer with a built-in screen. Come to think of it, some things never change.

The Finder is always running, so it's always available — and you can always switch to it, even when several other applications are open and chugging away. Figure 3-1 illustrates the Dock with the rather perspective-crazy Finder icon at the far-left side.

The Finder is always there, supporting you with a unique smile.

Figure 3.1. The Finder is always there, supporting you with a unique smile.

Is that icon supposed to be one face or two faces? I'm still confused, and I've been using the Mac now since 1989.

Note

Don't forget that Mac OS X gives you a second method of doing everything I cover in this chapter: You can use Terminal to uncover the UNIX core of Mac OS X, employing your blazing typing speed to take care of things from the command line. Of course, that's not the focus of this book, but for those who want to boldly go where no Mac operating system has ever gone before, you'll find more in Book IX, Chapter 1. Despite what you might have been led to believe, power and amazing speed are to be found in character-based computing.

Copying and Moving Files and Folders

Here's where drag-and-drop makes things about as easy as computing can get:

  • To copy a file or folder from one window to another location on the same drive: Hold down the Option key and click and drag the icon from its current home to the new location. (Note: You can drop files and folders on top of other folders, which puts the copy inside that folder.) If you're copying multiple items, select them first (read how in Book II, Chapter 2) and then drag and drop the entire crew.

    Tip

    "Is the Desktop a valid target location for a file or folder?" You're darn tootin'! I recommend, though, that you avoid cluttering up your Desktop with more than a handful of files. Instead, create a folder or two on your Desktop and then store those items within those folders. If you work with the contents of a specific folder often, drag it into the Places heading in the Sidebar (the column at the left side of any Finder window), and you can open that folder from the Finder with a single click — no matter where you are! (Alternatively, drag the folder to the Dock and drop it there, and you can open it with a single click from anywhere.)

  • To copy items from one window to a location on another drive: Click and drag the icon from the window to a window displaying the contents of the target drive. Or, in the spirit of drag-and-drop, you can simply drag the items to the drive icon, which places them in the root folder of that drive.

  • To move items from one window to a location on another drive: Hold down the

    Copying and Moving Files and Folders
  • To move items from one window to another location on the same drive: Simply drag the icon to the new location, whether it be a window or a folder.

Mac OS X provides you with a number of visual cues to let you know what's being copied or moved. For example, dragging one or more items displays a ghost image of the items, and when you've positioned the pointer over the target, Mac OS X highlights that location to let you know that you're in the zone. If you're moving or copying items into another Finder window, the window border is highlighted to let you know that Mac OS X understands the game plan.

Tip

In case you move the wrong thing or you port it to the wrong location, press

Copying and Moving Files and Folders

If the item that you're dragging already exists in the target location, you get a confirmation dialog like the one you see in Figure 3-2. You can choose to replace the file, leave the existing file alone, or stop the entire shooting match.

To replace or not to replace — the choice is yours.

Figure 3.2. To replace or not to replace — the choice is yours.

Cloning Your Items — It's Happening Now!

No need for sci-fi equipment or billions in cash — you can create an exact duplicate of any item within the same folder. (This is often handy when you need a simple backup of the same file in the same folder or when you plan to edit a document but you want to keep the original intact.)

Click the item to select it and then choose File

Cloning Your Items — It's Happening Now!

Alternatively, drag-and-drop aficionados can hold down the Option key and drag the original item to another spot in the same window. When you release the button, the duplicate appears. You can create a clone in another location (such as another window or folder) by holding down the Option key while dragging the original item to its new location.

Heck, if you prefer the Control key, you can hold it down while clicking the item and then choose Duplicate from the contextual menu that appears. Decisions, decisions....

Tip

Oh, and don't forget that Action button (it looks like a little gear with a downward-pointing arrow) on the Finder toolbar (refer to Figure 3-1). You can also click the Action button and choose Duplicate from the pop-up menu.

When you duplicate a folder, Mac OS X automatically duplicates all the contents of the folder as well. Remember that this could take some time if the folder contains a large number of small files (or a small number of large files). Groucho would've loved computers!

Deleting That Which Should Not Be

Even Leonardo da Vinci made the occasional design mistake — his trash can was likely full of bunched-up pieces of parchment. Luckily, no trees will be wasted when you decide to toss your unneeded files and folders; this section shows you how to delete items from your system.

Tip

By the way, as you'll soon witness for yourself, moving items to the Trash doesn't necessarily mean that they're immediately history.

Dragging unruly files against their will

In Mac OS X, the familiar Macintosh Trash can has been moved to the right edge of the Dock — in fact, it's now a spiffy-looking wire can instead of the old clunker that the Mac faithful remember. You can click and drag the items that you've selected to the Trash and drop them on top of the wire can icon to delete them. When the Trash contains at least one item, the wire can icon changes to appear as if it were full of trash.

Tip

You can also add a Delete icon to your Finder toolbar. For all the details, see Book III, Chapter 1.

Deleting with the menus and the keyboard

It isn't absolutely necessary to drag a file to the Trash to delete it. Your other options for scrapping selected files include

  • Choosing File from the Finder menu and choosing the Move to Trash menu item

  • Pressing the

    Deleting with the menus and the keyboard
  • Clicking the Action button on the Finder toolbar and selecting Move to Trash from the pop-up menu

  • Right-clicking the item to display the contextual menu and then choosing Move to Trash from that menu

Emptying That Wastepaper Basket

As I mention earlier, moving items to the Trash doesn't actually delete them immediately from your system. Believe me, this fail-safe measure comes in handy when you've been banging away at the keyboard for several hours and you stop paying close attention to what you're doing. (I usually also blame lack of Diet Coke.) More on how to rescue files from the Trash in the next section.

Note

As you can with any folder, you can check the contents of the Trash by clicking its icon in the Dock.

After you double-check the Trash contents and you're indeed absolutely sure that you want to delete its contents, use one of the following methods to nuke the digital Bit Bucket:

  • Choose the Empty Trash menu item from the Finder menu.

  • Choose Secure Empty Trash from the Finder menu.

    Tip

    Believe it or not, if you use the standard Empty Trash command, you still haven't completely zapped that refuse! Some third-party hard drive repair and recovery programs will allow an uncool person to restore items from the Trash. Use the Secure Empty Trash method for those sensitive files and folders that you want to immediately and irrevocably delete — the data is overwritten with random characters, making it impossible to recover. (A great idea for that Mac you want to sell on eBay, no? In fact, if you like, you can reinstall Mac OS X before you ship the Mac, leaving the Setup Assistant ready-to-run for the new owner.)

  • Press the

    Emptying That Wastepaper Basket
  • Click the Trash icon in the Dock and hold your finger down on the trackpad until the menu appears, then choose Empty Trash.

  • Right-click the Trash icon in the Dock and then choose Empty Trash from the contextual menu that appears.

Depending on the method you select and the settings you choose in System Preferences (which I cover in Book III, Chapter 3), Mac OS X might present you with a confirmation dialog to make sure that you actually want the Trash emptied.

WAIT! I Need That After All!

In the adrenaline-inducing event that you need to rescue something that shouldn't have ended up in the scrap pile, first click the Trash icon in the Dock to display the contents of the Trash. Then rescue the items that you want to save by dragging them to the Desktop or a folder on your hard drive. (This is roughly analogous to rescuing your old baseball glove from the family garage sale.)

Feel free to gloat. If someone else is nearby, ask her to pat you on the back and call you a lifesaver.

Renaming Your Items

You wouldn't get far in today's spacious virtual world without being able to change a moniker for a file or folder. To rename an item in Mac OS X, use one of these two methods:

  • With the trackpad: Click an icon's name once (or just press Return). Mac OS X highlights the text in an edit box. Type the new name and then press Return.

    Tip

    You want to wait a few seconds between clicks, as opposed to doing a rapid-fire double-click.

  • From the Info dialog: Select the item and press

    Renaming Your Items

Naturally, the first method is the easiest, and it's the one that I use most often.

Adding a Dash of Color

Snow Leopard also provides the ability to color-code files and folders to help you organize and recognize your data in a hurry. For example, why not assign the green label color to the files and folders that make up your current project? Or, if you need to mark a file for immediate attention, assign it the red label color.

To assign a label color to selected files and folders, you have three options:

  • Click the Action button on the Finder toolbar and then click the desired color.

  • Right-click the selection and then choose the color from the pop-up menu.

  • Click File and choose that perfect shade from the menu.

Displaying the Facts on Files and Folders

The Finder's Info dialog is the place to view the specifics on any highlighted item (including drives and aliases). Select an item and press

Displaying the Facts on Files and Folders
The General information panel appears first when you display the Info dialog.

Figure 3.3. The General information panel appears first when you display the Info dialog.

Mac OS X displays the General information panel when you first open the Info dialog, but other panels are usually available (depending on the type of selected items). To display the other panels, click the panel that you want to see.

For most types of files and folders, the Info dialog can tell you

  • Kind: What type of item it is — for example, whether it's a file, folder, drive, or alias

  • Open with: What program launches automatically when you open the selected item

  • Size: The total size of the item (or items, if there are more than ten) that you select

  • Where: The actual path on your hard drive where the item is located

  • Dates: The date when the item was created and was last modified

  • Version: The application version number

  • Sharing & Permissions: The privileges that control who can do what to the file (more on this later, in Book II, Chapter 6) and whether a file is locked in read-only mode

Some of this information you can change, and some can only be displayed. To banish the Info dialog from your Desktop, click the dialog's Close button.

Tip

You can hide or display various parts of the Info dialog by clicking the triangles next to each section heading.

For the rest of this section, I describe a number of tasks that you can accomplish from the Info dialog.

Tip

If you use a specific document over and over as a basis for different revisions, you can enable the Stationery Pad check box on the General information panel to use the file as stationery. Opening a stationery file automatically creates a new, untitled version of the file in the linked application; this can save you steps compared with duplicating the file or using the Save As procedure that I show you in Book II, Chapter 2.

Adding Spotlight comments

Mac OS X provides you with a Spotlight Comments field, where you can add more text about the file (and can be matched with Spotlight). I use this feature to record the version number of manuscript chapters and programs that I create during the course of writing books.

To add a comment, follow these steps:

  1. Display the Info dialog for the item by pressing

    Adding Spotlight comments
  2. Click in the Spotlight Comments box and type the comment text.

    If you need to expand the Spotlight Comments section of the Info dialog, click the triangle next to the Spotlight Comments heading. The arrow rotates and the Spotlight Comments box appears.

  3. Close the Info dialog to save the comment.

Displaying extensions

Extensions are alien creatures to most Mac owners. However, these (usually) three- or four-character add-ons that follow a period at the end of a filename have been a mainstay in the Windows and UNIX environments for years. An extension identifies what program owns a specific file, and therefore which application launches automatically when you double-click that file's icon. Examples of common extensions (and the applications that own them) include

  • .pdf: Preview or Adobe Acrobat

  • .doc: Microsoft Word

  • .pages: Apple Pages

  • .key: Apple Keynote

  • .psd: Adobe Photoshop or Photoshop Elements

  • .jpeg or .jpg: Preview, QuickTime, or your image editor

  • .tiff or .tif: Preview or your image editor

  • .htm or .html: Safari or your Web browser of choice

Why would someone want to see a file's extension? It comes in handy when a number of different types of files are linked to the same application. For example, if you install Adobe Photoshop, both JPEG and TIFF images have virtually the same icon, so it's sometimes very hard to tell one from the other. With extensions displayed, it's easy to tell what type of file you're looking at.

Follow this procedure to hide or display extensions with your filenames:

  1. Display the Info dialog for the item by pressing

    Displaying extensions
  2. If you need to expand the Name & Extension section of the Info dialog, click the triangle next to the Name & Extension heading.

  3. To display the extension for the selected file, clear the Hide Extension check box to disable it.

  4. Close the Info dialog to save your changes.

Choosing the application with which to launch a file

So what's the plan if the wrong application launches when you double-click a file? Not a problem: You can also change the linked application from the Info dialog as well. (I told you this was a handy toybox, didn't I?) Follow these steps to choose another application to pair with a selected file:

  1. Click the Action button on the Finder toolbar and click Get Info to display the Info dialog for the item.

  2. Click the triangle next to the Open With heading to expand it.

  3. Click the pop-up menu button.

    Mac OS X displays the applications that it feels are best suited to open this type of document.

  4. Select the application that should open the file.

    Tip

    To go completely hog-wild and choose a different application, select Other from the pop-up menu. Mac OS X opens a Choose Other Application dialog, where you can navigate to and select the application you want. (If the application isn't recognized as recommended, click the Enable pop-up menu and choose All Applications.) After you highlight the application, click Add.

  5. To globally update all the documents of the same type to launch the application that you chose, click the Change All button.

    Mac OS X displays a confirmation dialog asking whether you're sure about making this drastic change. Click Continue to update the other files of the same type or click Cancel to return to the Info dialog.

  6. Close the Info dialog to save your changes.

Locking files against evildoers

"Holy Item Insurance, Batman!" That's right, Boy Wonder: Before I leave the friendly land of the Info dialog, every MacBook owner needs to know how to protect files and folders from accidental deletion or editing. By locking a file, you allow it to be opened and copied — but not changed, renamed, or sent to the Trash. Locked items appear in the Finder with a small padlock attached to the icon.

To lock or unlock a file, you have to have ownership of the file. I cover privileges in Book III, but on a MacBook where you've configured only one administrator account, you should already have ownership.

Warning

If you're considering changing the ownership of a system-owned file, don't do it. You could throw a serious monkey wrench into your Snow Leopard system.

To lock a file, follow this procedure:

  1. Display the Info dialog for the item.

  2. Select the Locked check box to enable it.

    Tip

    The Locked check box is in the General section of the dialog.

  3. Close the Info dialog to save your changes.

Creating an Alias

I mention aliases in Book II, Chapter 2. As I discuss in that chapter, an alias acts as a link to an application or document that actually exists elsewhere on your system (a handy trick to use when organizing items on your hard drive). You have a number of different ways to conjure an alias after you select an item:

  • Choose File from the Finder menu and choose the Make Alias menu item. (You have to move the alias yourself.)

  • Press the

    Creating an Alias
  • Click the Action button on the Finder toolbar and then click Make Alias.

  • Right-click the selected item and then choose Make Alias from the contextual menu that appears.

In addition, you can hold down the

Creating an Alias

Note

Although Mac OS X does a great job in tracking the movements of an original and updating an alias, some actions can break the link. For example, if you delete the original, the alias is left wandering in search of a home. However, all is not lost — when you double-click a broken alias, Mac OS X offers to help you fix the alias. This involves browsing through your system to locate a new original.

Using the Apple Menu

The Apple menu is a familiar sight to any Mac owner. Although Apple contemplated removing it during the original development and beta cycle for Mac OS X version 10.0, the ruckus and cry from beta-testers ensured that it remains today. It's amazing how reassuring that little fellow can be when you boot the Big X for the first time.

In this section, I cover the important things that are parked under the Apple menu.

Using Recent Items

If you're like most of us — and I think I'm safe in assuming that you are — you tend to work on the same set of applications and files (and use the same network servers) during the day. Normally, this would be somewhat of a pain because each time you sit down in front of the keyboard, you have to drill down through at least one layer of folders to actually reach the stuff that you need. To make things easier on yourself, you could create a set of aliases on your Desktop that link to those servers, files, and applications ...but as you moved from project to project, you'd find yourself constantly updating the aliases. As Blackbeard the Pirate was wont to exclaim, "Arrgh!"

Ah, but Mac OS X is a right-smart operating system, and several years ago, Apple created the Recent Items menu to save you the trouble of drilling for applications and files (and even network servers as well). Figure 3-4 illustrates the Recent Items menu from my system. Note that the menu is thoughtfully divided into Applications, Documents, and Servers. When you open documents or launch applications, they're added to the list. (Accountants will revel in this First In, First Out technology.) To launch an application or document from the Recent Items menu — or connect to a network server — just click it.

To wipe the contents of the Recent Items menu — for example, if you've just finished a project and want to turn over a new digital leaf — click Recent Items and choose the Clear Menu item.

Use the Recent Items menu to access files, applications, and servers you've been using.

Figure 3.4. Use the Recent Items menu to access files, applications, and servers you've been using.

You can specify the number of recent items that will appear in the menu from System Preferences; display the Appearance pane and click the Applications, Documents, and Servers list boxes in the Number of Recent Items field. (More on this in Book III, Chapter 3.)

Tip

Also, remember the trick that I mention earlier: You can drag any folder or server into the Sidebar column at the left of a Finder window, adding it to that exclusive club that includes your Home folder and Applications folder.

Playing with the Dock

You know how Air Force One acts as the mobile nerve center for the president? And how The Chief can jet all around the world and take all his stuff along with him? Well, the Dock is kind of like that. Sort of.

If you want your Dock to go mobile as well, click the Apple menu and choose the Dock item to display the submenu. Here's a rundown of the options that you'll find:

  • Hiding: Click Turn Hiding On/Off to toggle the automatic hiding of the Dock. With hiding on, the Dock disappears off the edge of the screen until you move the pointer to that edge. (This is great for those who want to make use of as much Desktop territory as possible for their applications.)

    Tip

    You can press

    Playing with the Dock
  • Magnification: Click Turn Magnification On/Off to toggle icon magnification when your pointer is selecting an icon from the Dock. With magnification on, the icons in the Dock get really, really big ...a good thing for Mr. Magoo or those with grandiose schemes to take over the world. Check out the rather oversized icons in Figure 3-5. (The amount of magnification can be controlled from the System Preferences Dock settings, which I explain in Book III, Chapter 3.)

  • Position: Click one of three choices (Position on Left, Bottom, or Right) to make the Dock appear on the left, bottom, or right of the screen, respectively.

  • Dock Preferences: Click this to display the System Preferences Dock settings, which I explain in Book III, Chapter 3.

Bad program! Quit!

Once in a while, you'll encounter a stubborn application that locks up, slows to a crawl, or gets stuck in an endless loop. Although Mac OS X is a highly advanced operating system, it can still fall prey to bad programming or corrupted data.

Now those, my friend, are some pumped-up icons.

Figure 3.5. Now those, my friend, are some pumped-up icons.

Luckily, you can easily shut down these troublemakers from the Apple menu. Just choose Force Quit to display the Force Quit Applications dialog that you see in Figure 3-6. (Keyboard types can press

Now those, my friend, are some pumped-up icons.
Forcing an application to take a hike.

Figure 3.6. Forcing an application to take a hike.

If you select Finder in the Force Quit Applications dialog, the button changes to Relaunch. This allows you to restart the Finder, which comes in handy if your system appears to be unstable. (This is much faster than actually restarting your MacBook.)

Warning

Forcing an application to quit will also quit any open documents that you were working with in that application, so save your work (if the program will allow you to save anything). If you relaunch the Finder, some programs might restart as well.

Tracking down your version

This isn't a big deal, but if you choose About This Mac from the Apple menu, Mac OS X displays the About This Mac dialog that you see in Figure 3-7. In case you need to check the amount of memory or the processor in an unfamiliar Mac, the About This Mac dialog can display these facts in a twinkling. However, I primarily use it to check the Mac OS X version and build number as well as to launch the Apple System Profiler (which I discuss in full in Chapter 7 of this minibook). Click the More Info button to launch the Profiler.

Display your Mac's memory, processor, startup disk, and Big X version.

Figure 3.7. Display your Mac's memory, processor, startup disk, and Big X version.

Apple allows you to launch Software Update from both the About This Mac dialog and the Apple menu ...sheesh, they must really want you to keep your Big X up to date, I guess.

Specifying a location

Mac OS X allows you to create multiple network locations. Think of a location as a separate configuration that you use when you connect to a different network from a different locale. For instance, if you travel to a branch office, you'd assign a location for your desk and a location for the remote branch. A student might assign one location for her home network and another for the college computer lab network.

A location saves all the specific values that you've entered in the System Preferences Network settings, including IP address, DNS servers, proxy servers, and the like. If all this means diddly squat to you, don't worry — I explain this in Book VII, Chapter 1. For now, just remember that you can switch between locations by choosing Location from the Apple menu, which displays a submenu of locations that you can choose from. (You must create at least a second location for the Location menu item to appear in the Apple menu.)

Availing Yourself of Mac OS X Services

In Mac OS X, Services allow you to merge information from one application with another. To Mac old-timers, that might sound suspiciously like the Clipboard; however, Services can also include functionality from an application, so you can create new documents or complete tasks without running another program! Services can be used in both the Finder and Mac OS X applications.

To illustrate, here's a fun example:

  1. Launch TextEdit (you'll find it in your Applications folder) and type your name.

  2. Highlight your name.

  3. Click the TextEdit menu — don't switch to the Finder; use the TextEdit Application menu — and choose Services.

  4. From the Services submenu, choose Search in Google.

After you've shaken your head at all the sites devoted to people with the same name, consider what you just did — you ran the Safari application from within TextEdit, using selected words! Pretty slick, eh?

A glance at the other Services that show up within most applications gives you an idea of just how convenient and powerful Mac OS X Services can be. I often use Services to take care of things such as

  • Sending an e-mail message from an e-mail address in a text file or the Address Book (via the Mail Service)

  • Capturing a screen snapshot within an application (using the Grab Service)

  • Sending a file to a Bluetooth-equipped PDA or cell phone within an application (using the Send File to Bluetooth Device service)

Remember, you can access the Services menu from a Mac OS X application by picking that program's Application menu (sometimes called the named menu). For instance, in the demonstration earlier, I use the TextEdit menu that appears on the TextEdit menu bar. In Microsoft Word, I would click the Word menu.

Geez, I think the computing world needs another word for menu — don't you?

Tip

Many third-party applications that you install under Mac OS X can add their own commands under the Services menu, so be sure to read the documentation for a new application to see what Service functionality it adds.

Get Thee Hence: Using the Go Menu

Remember the transporter from "Star Trek"? Step on the little platform, assume a brave pose, and whoosh! — you're transported instantaneously to another ship or (more likely) to a badly designed planet exterior built inside a soundstage. Talk about convenience ...that is, as long as the doggone thing didn't malfunction.

The Finder's Go menu gives you the chance to play Captain Kirk: You can jump immediately to specific spots, both within the confines of your own system as well as external environments, such as your network or the Internet. (You can leave your phaser and tricorder in your cabin.)

The destinations that you can travel to using the Go menu and the iDisk submenu include the following:

  • Back/Forward/Enclosing Folder: I lump these three commands together because they're all basic navigation commands. For example, Back and Forward operate just as they do in Safari or your favorite Web browser. If you're currently inside a folder, you can return to the parent folder by clicking Enclosing Folder.

  • Computer: This window includes your hard drives, CD and DVD drives, and your network — the same places that appear when you open a new Finder window with the

    Get Thee Hence: Using the Go Menu
  • Home: This window displays the home directory for the user currently logged in.

  • Desktop: This window displays the files and folders that you've stored on your Snow Leopard desktop.

  • Network: Did you guess that this displays a window with all your network's servers? Dead giveaway, that.

  • iDisk: This window displays the contents of your Internet iDisk storage (or someone else's). (More on the coolness that is iDisk in Book VI, Chapter 4.)

  • Applications: This window includes all the applications that appear in your Mac OS X Applications folder (a neat Just the programs, ma'am arrangement that really comes in handy).

  • Documents: Yep, you guessed it: This window displays the contents of your Documents folder.

  • Utilities: This window displays the contents of your Mac OS X Utilities folder.

  • Recent Folders: This window displays a submenu that allows you to choose from the folders that you've recently opened.

You can also type the path for a specific folder (use the Go to Folder command) or connect to a specific network server (use the Connect to Server command).

Note that most of the Go menu commands include keyboard shortcuts, proving once again that the fingers are quicker than the trackpad.

Monkeying with the Menu Bar

Ever stared at a menu bar for inspiration? Fortunately for MacBook owners like you and me, people in Cupertino are paid to do just that, and these designers get the big bucks to make the Mac OS X menu bar the best that it can be. Thus were born menu bar icons, which add useful controls in what would otherwise be a wasted expanse of white.

Using menu bar icons

Depending on your hardware, Mac OS X might install several menu bar icons. The Volume icon is always there by default, along with the Clock display, which is actually an icon in disguise. Figure 3-8 illustrates these standard icons, along with a couple of others.

Some icons won't appear unless you turn them on. For instance, the Displays icon won't appear unless you enable the Show Displays in Menu Bar check box within the Displays pane in System Preferences. The Displays menu bar icon, which looks like a monitor, allows you to choose the recommended resolutions and color depth settings for your graphics card and monitor. For example, the recommended settings for my MacBook Pro's LCD monitor include 1024 × 768, 1280 × 800, and 1440 × 900 resolutions, and my display can be set to thousands or millions of colors. Typically, it's a good idea to choose the highest resolution and the highest color depth. You can also jump directly to the System Preferences Display settings by clicking Displays Preferences in the menu.

Adjust your Mac with a click of these menu icons.

Figure 3.8. Adjust your Mac with a click of these menu icons.

To quickly change the audio volume level within Mac OS X, click the Sound Volume icon (it looks like a speaker with emanating sound waves) once to display its slider control; then click and drag the slider to adjust the level up or down. After you select a level by lifting your finger from the trackpad, your MacBook thoughtfully plays the default system sound to help you gauge the new volume level.

Depending on the functionality that you're using with Mac OS X, these other menu bar icons might also appear:

  • Modem status: You can turn on the display of the Modem status icon from the corresponding modem panel on the Network pane in System Preferences, which I discuss in Book III, Chapter 3. The icon can be set to show the time that you've been connected to the Internet as well as the status of the connection procedure. (Naturally, your MacBook will need an external USB modem to use this status icon.)

  • AirPort: Because your MacBook is equipped with AirPort Extreme hardware, you can enable the Show AirPort Status in Menu Bar check box within System Preferences. To do so, click the Network icon and then choose your AirPort connection in the column at the left. The AirPort status icon displays the status of the AirPort connection; click the AirPort icon to toggle AirPort on or off. The icon displays the relative strength of your AirPort signal, whether you're connected to a Base Station or a peer-to-peer computer network, or whether AirPort is turned off. You can also switch between multiple AirPort networks from the menu.

  • Bluetooth: You can toggle Bluetooth networking on or off. You can also make your MacBook discoverable or hidden to other Bluetooth devices, send a file to a Bluetooth device, or browse for new Bluetooth devices in your vicinity. Additionally, you can set up a Bluetooth device that's already recognized or open the Bluetooth pane within System Preferences.

  • Time Machine: If you're using Time Machine to back up your MacBook automatically, this icon displays the date of your last backup. You can also manually start a backup from the menu bar icon. To display the icon, open System Preferences and click the Time Machine icon; then click the Show Time Machine Status in the Menu Bar check box to select it.

  • PPoE: The display of this icon is controlled from the PPoE settings on the Network pane within System Preferences. Click this icon to connect to or disconnect from the Internet using Point-to-Point over Ethernet (PPoE), which is a type of Internet connection offered by some digital subscriber line (DSL) providers.

Doing timely things with the Clock

Even the Clock itself isn't static eye candy on the Mac OS X menu bar (I told you this was a hardworking operating system, didn't I?). Click the Clock display to toggle the icon between the default text display and a miniature analog clock. You'll also find the complete day and date at the top of the menu.

In fact, you can even open the System Preferences Date & Time settings from the icon. From within the Date & Time settings, you can choose whether the seconds or day of the week are included, whether the separators should flash, or whether Mac OS X should display the time in 24-hour (military) format. More on this in Book III, Chapter 3.

Eject, Tex, Eject!

Mac OS X makes use of both static volumes (your MacBook's hard drive, which remains mummified inside your computer's case) and removable volumes (such as USB Flash drives, your iPod, and CDs/DVD-ROMs). Mac OS X calls the process of loading and unloading a removable volume by old-fashioned terms — mounting and unmounting — but you and I call the procedure loading and ejecting.

Note

Just to keep things clear, I should point out that we're talking hardware devices here, so static and removable volumes have nothing to do with the sound volume control on your menu bar.

I won't discuss loading/mounting a removable volume — the process differs depending on the computer because some MacBooks need a button pushed on the keyboard, others have buttons on the drive itself, and some drives have just a slot, with no button at all. However, there are a number of standard ways of unloading/unmounting/ejecting a removable volume:

  • Drag the Volume's icon from the Desktop to the Trash, which displays an Eject pop-up label to help underline the fact that you are not deleting the contents of the drive. Let me underline that with a Mark's Maxim because Switchers from the Windows world are usually scared to death by the concept of dragging a volume to the Trash.

    Note

    Have no fear — in the Apple universe, you can drag removable volumes to the Trash with aplomb.

  • Click the Volume's icon and use the

    Eject, Tex, Eject!
  • With the volume open in a Finder window, click the Action button and choose Eject from the pop-up menu.

  • Click the File menu and choose Eject.

  • Click the Eject button next to the device in the Finder window sidebar.

  • Right-click the Volume's icon to display the contextual menu; then choose Eject.

  • Press your MacBook's keyboard Eject key to eject a CD or DVD from your built-in optical drive. (If you're using an external keyboard without a Media Eject key, you may be able to press and hold F12 instead.)

You can't unmount a static volume from the Desktop — you have to use the Disk Utility application — so your internal hard drive icon will stay where it is.

Common Tasks Aplenty

Okay, I admit it — this section is kind of a grab bag of three very common tasks. However, I want to walk you through these three procedures early in the book. Most MacBook owners want to listen to and record CDs as soon as they start using Snow Leopard, and you'd be amazed how much information still flows across the Internet in plain, simple text.

Therefore, hang around and take care of business.

Opening and editing text files

Text files would seem to be another anachronism in this age of formatted Web pages, rich-text format (RTF) documents, and word processors galore. However, virtually every computer ever built can read and write in standard text, so text files are often used for

  • Information files on the Internet, such as FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions files)

  • README and update information by software developers

  • Swapping data between programs, such as comma- and tab-delimited database files

Here's the quick skinny on opening, editing, and saving an existing text file:

  1. Navigate to your Applications folder and launch TextEdit.

  2. Press

    Opening and editing text files
  3. Navigate to the desired text file and double-click the filename to load it.

    Tip

    You can also open an existing text file by dragging its icon from the Finder window to the TextEdit icon.

  4. Click the insertion cursor anywhere in the file and begin typing. Or, to edit existing text, drag the insertion cursor across the characters to highlight them and type the replacement text.

    Tip

    TextEdit automatically replaces the existing characters with those that you type. To simply delete text, highlight the characters and press Delete.

  5. After you finish editing the document, you can overwrite the original by pressing

    Opening and editing text files
  6. To exit TextEdit, press

    Opening and editing text files

Listening to an audio CD

By default, Snow Leopard uses iTunes to play an audio CD. Although I cover iTunes in complete detail in Book IV, Chapter 2, take a moment to see how to master the common task of playing an audio CD (just in case you want to jam while reading these early chapters). Follow these steps:

  1. Load the audio CD into your MacBook's optical drive. (Remember, MacBook Air owners, you can add an external USB optical drive at any time.)

    A CD volume icon appears on your Desktop, and then Mac OS X automatically loads iTunes and displays its spiffy window.

  2. If you have iTunes set up to start playing by default, it automatically begins playing the disc; however, if you have to manually start the music, click the Play button at the upper left of the iTunes window to begin playing the disc at the beginning. To play an individual track, double-click the track name in the iTunes window.

  3. To adjust the volume from within iTunes, drag the Volume slider to the left or right — it's to the right of the Play and Fast Forward buttons.

  4. To eject the disc and load another audio CD, press

    Listening to an audio CD
  5. To exit iTunes, press

    Listening to an audio CD

Tip

The first time you run iTunes, you're asked to configure the program and specify whether Mac OS X should automatically connect to the Internet to download the track titles for the disc you've loaded. I recommend that you accept all the default settings and that you allow automatic connection. Is simple, no?

Recording — nay, burning — a data CD

Mac OS X offers a built-in CD recording feature that allows you to burn the simplest form of CD: a standard data CD-ROM that can hold up to approximately 660MB of files and folders, and can be read on both Macs and PCs running Windows, UNIX, and Linux. (To burn an audio CD, use iTunes, as I show you in Book IV, Chapter 2.)

Back to the story! To record a data disc, follow these steps:

  1. Load a blank CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, or DVD-RW into your drive.

    I assume for this demonstration that you're using a write-once CD-R.

  2. In the dialog that appears and prompts you for an action to take, choose the default, Open Finder, for this demonstration.

    Mac OS X displays an Untitled CD volume icon on your Desktop. (It's marked with the letters CDR so that you know that the disc is recordable.)

  3. Double-click the Untitled CD icon to display the contents. (It'll be empty, naturally.)

  4. Click and drag files and folders to the CD window as you normally do.

  5. Rename any files or folders as necessary.

    Remember, after you've started recording, this stuff is etched in stone, so your disc window should look the same as the volume window looks on the finished CD-ROM.

  6. Click File on the Finder menu and choose Burn Disc, or click the Burn button in the CD window.

    The Big X displays a confirmation dialog.

  7. If you've forgotten something, you can click the Cancel or Eject button. Otherwise, click the Burn button and sit back and watch the fun.

Note

Unfortunately, Mac OS X doesn't support recording from the Finder for some external and third-party drives available for the Macintosh. If you can't burn from the Finder (or you're willing to pay for extra features), I recommend that you buy a copy of Roxio Toast Titanium recording software (www.roxio.com).

All You Really Need to Know about Printing

To close out this chapter, I turn your attention to another task that most MacBook owners need to tackle soon after buying their laptop or installing Snow Leopard: printing documents. Because basic printing is so important (and in most cases, so simple), allow me to use this final section to demonstrate how to print a document.

Most of us have a Universal Serial Bus (USB) printer — USB being the favored hardware connection within Mac OS X — so, as long as your printer is supported by Mac OS X, setting it up is as easy as plugging it into one of your Mac's USB ports. The Big X does the rest of the work, selecting the proper printer software driver from the Library/Printers folder and setting your printer as the default power of the universe.

Tip

Before you print, preview! Would you jump from an airplane without a parachute? Then why would you print a document without double-checking it first? Click Preview, and Mac OS X opens the Preview application to show you what the printed document will look like. (Once again, some upstart applications have their own built-in Print Preview mode thumbnails within the Print dialog, so previewing may not be necessary.) When you're done examining your handiwork, close the Preview application to return to your document.

To print from within any application using the default page characteristics — standard 8½-x-11-inch paper, portrait mode, no scaling — follow these steps:

  1. Within your application, click File and choose Print — or press the

    All You Really Need to Know about Printing

    Mac OS X displays the simple version of the Print dialog. (To display all the fields that you see in Figure 3-9, click the button with the down arrow next to the Printer pop-up menu.)

    The Print dialog is available from any application with any real guts.

    Figure 3.9. The Print dialog is available from any application with any real guts.

    Some applications use their own custom Print dialogs, but you should see the same general settings.

  2. Click in the Copies field and enter the number of copies that you need.

    You can also enable or disable collation, just as you can with those oh-so-fancy copiers.

  3. Decide what you want to print.

    • The whole shootin' match: To print the entire document, use the default Pages radio button setting of All.

    • Anything less: To print a range of selected pages, select the From radio button and enter the physical starting and ending pages.

  4. (Optional) Choose application-specific printing parameters.

    Each Mac OS X application provides different panes so that you can configure settings specific to that application. You don't have to display any of these extra settings to print a default document, but the power is there to change the look dramatically when necessary. To display these settings, click the pop-up menu in the center of the Print dialog and choose one of these panes. For example, if you're printing from the Address Book, you can choose the Address Book entry from the pop-up menu and elect to print a phone list or an e-mail list.

  5. When everything is go for launch, click the Print button.

Of course, there are more settings and more functionality to the printing system within Mac OS X, and I cover more complex printing topics in much more detail in Book VIII, Chapter 4. However, I can tell you from my experiences as a consultant and hardware technician that this short introduction to printing will likely suffice for 90 percent of the MacBook owners on Earth. 'Nuff said.

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