Opening mac os x programs
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Of course, you can also move Mac OS X windows by dragging any "shiny gray" edge; see Figure 1-4. Tip: Here's a nifty keyboard shortcut: You can cycle through the different open windows in one program without using the mouse.
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4.3. Using the Dock Most of the time, you'll use the Dock as either a launcher (you click an icon once to open the corresponding program, file, folder, or disk) or as a status indicator
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Click a program's icon on the Dock, the Sidebar, or the Finder toolbar. Use Spotlight. Hit -Space bar, type the first letters of the program's name, and then press Return or Enter
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7.1. Introducing Automator Automator, like most programs on your Mac, sits waiting in your Applications folder. Double-click Automator's icon to open it for the first time (Figure 7-2). Figure 7-2. Automator's icon is a computer generated robot image named Otto. (Get it? Otto Matic? Stop, you're killing us!) The icon is supposed to evoke an image of Automator as a servile program, executing your every desire without question. Any similarity to the malevolent androids of I, Robot is purely coincidental. 7.1.1. Navigating the Screen As shown in Figure 7-3, Automator looks confusing.
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Icon Names Every document, program, folder, and disk on your Mac is represented by an icon: a colorful little picture that you can move, copy, or double-click to open
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