MacBook Pro Portable Genius
By Galen Gruman
()
About this ebook
Learn the skills, tools and shortcuts you need in order to make the most of your MacBook Pro
This easy-to-use, compact guide skips the fluff and gets right to the essentials so that you can maximize all the latest features of the MacBook Pro. Packed with savvy insights and tips on key tools and shortcuts, this handy book aims to help you increase your productivity and save you time and hassle. From desktop sharing and wireless networking to running Windows applications and more, this book shows you what you want to know.
- Includes the latest version of OS X, iCloud, FaceTime, and more
- Covers all the essential tools, topics, and shortcuts on things like running Windows applications, using the Intel Ivy Bridge processor, and more
- Features Genius icons throughout the book that provide smart and innovative ways to handle tasks and save yourself time
MacBook Pro Portable Genius, 5th Edition puts you well on the way to being a pro at using your MacBook Pro!
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MacBook Pro Portable Genius - Galen Gruman
Chapter 1
How Can I Use My Desktop Space Efficiently?
9781118677766-co01.tifThe MacBook Pro’s Desktop is the area displayed on its screen. Like a physical desktop, you place things (in this case, icons and windows) on it to focus your attention on them and use their content. As you work, your Desktop naturally becomes cluttered with windows for applications, documents, and system tools. Keeping control of all these windows helps you make the most of your Desktop space. With all the great Desktop management tools that the Mac’s OS X operating system offers, it’s much easier to keep your MacBook Pro’s Desktop neat and tidy than it is a physical desktop.
Setting the Finder Desktop’s Icon Preferences
By default on a new MacBook Pro or in a new installation of OS X on a MacBook, icons for the MacBook Pro’s hard drive, external hard drives, DVDs, CDs, and servers do not appear on the Desktop. This keeps the entire space on the Desktop clear for your files and folders. (If you upgraded to a new version of OS X or used the Migration Assistant to transfer the contents of another Mac to your MacBook Pro, the drive icons that display are whatever was previously set.)
To access drives, whether or not they appear on the Desktop, open a Finder window (choose File→New Finder Window or press mac command key +N in the Finder, or double-click a folder or drive icon) and click them in the Sidebar to open their contents.
note.eps The folders and files you see on the Desktop are determined by the contents of the Desktop folder, which is located within your Home folder (choose Go→Home in the Finder to see the Home folder’s contents). If you don’t want a folder or file taking up space on your Desktop, move it into a different folder within your Home folder. In addition to having a neater appearance, this also helps you work more efficiently because it’s easier to find folders and files if they’re here rather than scattered on your Desktop.
Perform the following steps to show or hide Desktop icons:
1. Choose Finder→Preferences. The Finder Preferences dialog appears.
2. Go to the General pane, if it isn’t already visible.
3. Select and deselect the check boxes for the icons that you want to see and don’t want to see, respectively, on your Desktop. For example, to hide the icon for the MacBook Pro’s internal hard drive or any external hard drive connected to it, deselect the Hard Disks check box. As you deselect the check boxes, the related icons disappear from your Desktop.
note.eps To set the size, grid spacing, text size, and other options for the Desktop, click the Desktop so no Finder windows are selected. Choose View→Show View Options, and use the resulting panel to configure these settings for your Desktop. The title of this panel indicates the object for which you are configuring the view options, so it should be Desktop. You can use this same command with any folder to set its view options.
Working with Finder Windows
Much of the time that you are working on your Desktop will involve Finder windows. Two areas of Finder windows that you will use frequently are the Sidebar and the toolbar, in addition to the window itself. You can use these features as they are, but you can also customize them to make your Desktop space more efficient.
Using Finder windows
Finder windows are essentially lists of what’s in whatever drive or folder you opened. Double-click a drive or folder to open a Finder window. If you open a drive or folder from the Desktop, a new Finder window opens for its contents. If you open a drive or folder from within a Folder window, the Finder window displays its contents in place of whatever it was previously showing.
A quick way to open a new Finder window in the Finder is to choose File→New Window or to press mac command key +N. That way, you can look at contents from different locations at the same time, and even copy or move items across them.
If you drag items from one Finder window to another, the items are moved if the Finder windows are showing contents from folders on the same drive. They are copied if the Finder windows are showing the contents of folders from different drives. Hold down the Option key when dragging to copy files on the same disk, and hold down the Option key when dragging to move files to a different disk; holding Option reverses the standard behavior.
Close unwanted Finder windows by clicking the Close button at the upper left of the window or by pressing Shift+ mac command key +W. Note that this shortcut is new to OS X 10.9 Mavericks and had been just mac command key +W in previous versions of OS X.
Mavericks introduces a new capability in Finder windows called Finder tabs that reduces clutter on the Desktop. It works just like a browser’s tabbed panes do: Each pane has its own tab that you click to switch to that pane, as Figure 1.1 shows. Create a new tabbed pane by choosing File→New Tab or pressing mac command key +T. You can drag items from one tab to another: From the open pane, just drag the item to the tab of the other pane.
To close a tabbed pane, hover the pointer over its tab, and click the X icon that appears on the left side of the tab, or just press mac command key +W to close the active (open) pane.
9781118677766-fg0101.eps1.1 OS X Mavericks lets you have multiple tabbed panes in the same Finder window, to decrease Desktop clutter.
Using and configuring the Sidebar
The Finder’s Sidebar makes it easy to get to specific locations, meaning folders, drives, and even files. It comes preloaded with a set of aliases (shortcuts) to common locations, but you can add items to, or remove them from, the Sidebar so it contains aliases to the items you use most frequently.
The Sidebar is organized into sections, as shown in Figure 1.2. You control which ones display by using the Finder Preferences dialog (choose Finder→Preferences). The process is similar to how you control which disk icons appear on the Desktop, except that you go to the Sidebar pane in the dialog rather than the General pane, and then check and uncheck the desired options to control what displays, as shown in Figure 1.3.
In the Sidebar itself, you can show or hide the contents of a section by hovering the pointer over a label, like Devices, and clicking the Hide or Show label that appears to its right to control if the section’s contents appear.
9781118677766-fg0102.eps1.2 Use the Sidebar to quickly move to the items that you want to view in a Finder window.
9781118677766-fg0103.eps1.3 You can determine the kinds of resources available in the Desktop via the Finder Preferences dialog’s General pane (top) and what appears in the Sidebar via its Sidebar pane (bottom).
So what are the sections? The Favorites section holds aliases to the folders on your MacBook Pro that Apple expects you open most frequently; you can customize it so it reflects the folders you open the most. The Shared section holds locations you are accessing on a network, such as a shared hard drive. The Devices section includes hard drives and disk images that are mounted on your MacBook Pro. And the new Tags section in OS X Mavericks shows files and folders that you tag with specific labels, such as those belonging to a specific project.
Using the items on the Sidebar is simple (which is why it’s so useful). Simply click the icon with which you want to work. What happens when you click depends on the kind of icon it is. The following are the common items:
bullet.tif All My Files. When you click this icon, all the files you’ve worked with appear in the Finder window. You can use the view and browse tools to access any file you need.
bullet.tif AirDrop. When you click this icon, you can see other users connected to the same Wi-Fi network and have their AirDrop folder open—if they’re using a Mac made in 2011 or later and running OS X 10.7 Lion or higher. You can send files to other users by dropping them on the person’s icon in the AirDrop window, and they can share files with you in the same way.
bullet.tif Applications. If the icon is for an application, the application launches.
bullet.tif Documents. Clicking a document’s icon opens the associated application, and you see and work with the document’s contents.
bullet.tif Folder. When you click a folder, you see its contents in the Finder window.
bullet.tif Shared folder or drive. When you select a shared network resource, you see either the login dialog, or if your MacBook Pro is configured to automatically log in to the resource, you see its contents.
bullet.tif Devices. When you select a device, its contents are displayed in the Finder window.
bullet.tif Tags. If you click a tag icon, you see all files and folders using that tag—regardless of their location on the Mac— in the Finder window.
note.eps Each type of Sidebar item has a distinctive icon, making what it represents easy to determine.
You can add an alias to a drive or folder to the Sidebar by dragging its icon from the Finder window into the Sidebar’s Favorites section. To add an alias in the Sidebar to a file, select it and press Control+ mac command key +T. Drag any of these aliases out to remove them from the Sidebar (the original items are not deleted from the Mac, of course).
note.eps The Favorites section is the only one that you can manually configure. The content of the other sections is determined by the Preferences settings, what your MacBook Pro is connected to on the network, and the mounted devices or disk images. If you drag an icon onto something in the other sections, it may be copied there instead (for example, when you drag an icon onto a disk’s icon).
To copy the file into a Sidebar location (rather than open that location in another Finder window), hold down the Option key while you move the file’s icon onto a folder’s or drive’s alias in the Sidebar. But if you drag an item onto a shared location in the Sidebar, rather than to a folder or drive, it is copied to that location instead of moved; to move an item to a shared location via the Sidebar, hold down the Option key.
To change the order of items within the Sidebar, drag them up or down the list. As you move an item between others, they slide apart to show you where the item you are moving will be. (You can move items within their sections, as well as from the Devices section to the Favorites section (but not in the reverse direction, or to or from other sections).
Using and configuring the toolbar
The toolbar appears at the top of the Finder window and contains buttons and pop-up menus that you can use to access commands quickly and easily. You can configure the toolbar so it contains the tools you use most frequently. When you open a Finder window, the toolbar appears at the top.
genius_fmt.eps When viewing a Finder window in Grid view, you can change the size of the icons using the slider at the bottom right of the window. If you don’t see it, choose View→Show Status Bar.
The following default tools appear on the toolbar (as grouped from left to right):
bullet.tif Back and Forward buttons. These move you along the hierarchy of Finder windows that you’ve moved through (just like the Back and Forward buttons in a web browser).
bullet.tif View buttons. You can change the view of the current window by clicking one of the View buttons. For example, to see the window in List view, click the second button in the View group (its icon has horizontal lines). The four buttons (left to right) are Grid, List, Columns, and Cover Flow.
bullet.tif Arrange pop-up menu. This menu lets you arrange the contents of the window. For example, you can rank items by name, date last opened, size, and so on. Choose None to remove the arrange settings.
bullet.tif Action pop-up menu. This menu contains a number of useful contextual commands. These are the same as those that appear when you right-click an item. Options can include Move to Trash, Get Info, and Make Alias.
bullet.tif Share menu. Use this menu to share a selected item; the options you see depend on the type of item you have selected. Options can include Email, Message, AirDrop, Flickr, and so on.
bullet.tif Tag button. Use this new capability in OS X Mavericks to apply a tag to the selected item. A pop-up opens in which you can select an existing tag or type in a new one. Items can have multiple tags.
note.eps Right-clicking opens a contextual menu showing options relevant to whatever was right-clicked. A right-click is also called a secondary click, because it’s possible to have the Mac reverse the left and right sides of the trackpad (or external mouse if you’re using one) to accommodate left-handed users. By default, a standard click, such as to select an item, is done on the left. Another way to do a right-click is to hold down Control and do a standard click.
bullet.tif Search bar. You can search for items on the Mac by typing text or numbers into the Search bar. As you type, items that match your search term appear in the Finder window. By default, OS X searches both file names and file contents. But if you wait a moment before pressing Return to begin the search, a menu appears to let you limit the search to, for example, filenames or types of files, as Figure 1.4 shows.
9781118677766-fg0104.eps1.4 When you search files, you can narrow the search by pausing in the Search bar briefly to open a menu.
You can change what appears in the toolbar. Follow these steps:
1. Open a Finder window.
2. Choose View→Customize Toolbar. The Toolbar Customization sheet appears, as shown in Figure 1.5.
3. To remove a button from the toolbar, drag its icon from the toolbar outside the Finder window. When you release the trackpad, the selected button disappears. (You can always add it back later.)
4. To add a button to the toolbar, drag it from the sheet and drop it on the toolbar where you want it to appear. When you release the trackpad, the selected button is added to the toolbar.
9781118677766-fg0105.eps1.5 Use the Toolbar Customization sheet to define and organize the tools on your toolbar.
5. Using the Show menu, choose how you want the buttons on the toolbar to appear. Your options are Icon and Text, Icon Only, and Text Only.
6. When you finish customizing the toolbar, click Done. The Toolbar Customization sheet closes, and you see your customized toolbar in any Finder windows.
note.eps To return the toolbar to its default state, open the Toolbar Customization sheet and drag the default set of buttons onto the toolbar.
Working with the Dock
The Dock is an important part of your Desktop space. By default, it appears at the bottom of the Desktop, but you can control many aspects of its appearance, including where it is located and, to a great degree, how it works. The Dock is organized into two general sections. The area to the left of the application/document separation line (the faint, dark line a few icons to the left of the Trash icon) contains application icons. The area to the right of this line contains icons for documents, folders, minimized Finder or application windows, and the Trash/Eject icon.
When folders appear on the Dock, they become stacks by default. When you click a stack, it pops up into a fan or appears as a grid (depending on how many items are in the folder), as shown in Figure 1.6, so you can work with the items it contains. You can disable this feature for any folder so it behaves more like a normal folder (more on that shortly).
9781118677766-fg0106.eps1.6 Clicking a folder’s icon on the Dock causes its contents to either appear in a grid or fan out (as shown here), depending on how many items it contains and your preferences.
You can perform all the following functions from the Dock:
bullet.tif See running applications. Whenever an application is running, you see its icon on the Dock. If the related preference is set (more details on this a bit later), a small, glowing blue light is located at the bottom of every running application’s icon. Application icons also provide information about what is happening with those applications. For example, when you receive e-mail, a badge on the Mail application’s icon changes to indicate the number of messages you have received since you last read messages.
bullet.tif Open applications, folders, minimized windows, and documents quickly by clicking the related icon. You can drag applications from the Desktop or a Finder window to the Dock’s left side and can drag folders, files, and drives to the Dock’s right side to put an alias to the items on the Dock for one-click access later. Or right-click a running application’s icon, and choose Options→Add to Dock to keep it in the Dock. Drag an icon out of the Dock to remove it from the Dock (the item is not deleted from your Mac). You can rearrange the application icons on the Dock by dragging them to the Dock location where you want them to reside.
bullet.tif Quickly switch among open applications and windows by clicking the icon for the item you want to bring to the front.
bullet.tif Be alerted about issues. When an application needs your attention, its icon bounces on the Dock until you move into that application and handle the issues.
bullet.tif Control applications and switch to any of their open windows. When you right-click the icon of an application, a contextual menu appears. When the application is running, this menu lists commands, as well as all the open windows related to that application. When the application isn’t running, you see a different set of commands (such as the Open command).
bullet.tif Customize its appearance and function. You can control how the Dock looks, including its size, whether it is always visible, and where it is located using the Dock system preference, which I describe later in this chapter.
note.eps To open a system preference—OS X’s method for customizing much of the Mac’s behavior—choose →System Preferences to open the System Preferences application, and click the icon for the specific system preference you want to adjust, such as Dock or Security & Privacy.
Understanding how applications and folders work in the Dock
Two icons on the Dock are unique and always there: the Finder and the Trash.
bullet.tif When you click the Finder icon (anchored on the left end of a horizontal Dock or at the top of a vertical one), a Finder window opens (if one isn’t already open). If at least one Finder window is open, clicking the Finder icon brings the Finder window you used most recently to the front.
bullet.tif The Trash icon is where all folders and files go when their time is done. When the Trash contains files or folders, its icon includes crumpled paper so you know something is in there. When you select an ejectable item (such as a DVD), the Trash icon changes to the Eject symbol. You can drag a disc, drive, volume, or any other ejectable item onto that icon to eject it.
genius.eps To move between applications quickly, hold down mac command key +Tab. The Application Switcher appears. Click an icon to switch to its application, or while holding down mac command key repeatedly press Tab to cycle forward through the list, or repeatedly press Shift+Tab to cycle backward through the list. When you release the keys, you switch to the selected application. You can also type Q to quit the selected application in the Application Switcher.
Unless an application is permanently added to the Dock (in which case, its icon remains in the same position), the icon for each application you open appears on the right (or bottom) edge of the application area of the Dock while running and then disappears when you quit the application.
Unlike open applications, open documents don’t automatically appear on the Dock. Document icons appear on the Dock only when you minimize a document’s window from the application using it or when you manually add them by dragging their icon from a Finder window.
In what Apple calls App Exposé, you can see a list of all open windows in a running application by right-clicking the application’s Dock icon and choosing Show All Windows from the contextual menu that appears. Or just press the default shortcut (usually Fn+F10 or Control+down arrow); the same shortcut restores the regular view.
When you minimize an application window, it is pulled by default into the Dock using the Genie Effect. You can change this so the Scale Effect is used instead, via the Dock system preference. You can also change where the minimized application’s document windows go: into the application’s icon or into the document section of the Dock. When in the document section of the Dock, minimized windows are marked with the related application’s icon in the lower-right corner of the Dock icon so you can easily tell from which application the windows came. Minimized windows disappear from the Dock when you maximize them or when you close the application from which they came.
genius.eps When you hide an application, OS X also hides its open windows in the Dock, though you can quickly open one of its windows by right-clicking the application icon or pressing the default shortcut (usually Fn+F10 or Control+down arrow) and choosing the window you want. (The application’s icon remains in the Dock, so you know it’s still running.)
When you place a folder’s icon on the Dock, it displays as a stack. A stack has some special characteristics, which is why it isn’t just called a folder (however, you can configure a stack to behave like a folder). Two stacks are installed on your Dock by default: Downloads and Documents.
Stack icons sometimes take on the icon of the most recent file that has been placed into them. For example, if you last downloaded a disk image file, the Downloads stack icon is the one for a disk image. When you place an image into your Pictures folder and have that folder installed on your Dock, its icon is a thumbnail of the last image you placed in it.
When you click a stack icon, its contents fan onto the Desktop if there are only a few of them, or open into a grid if there are many. You can access an item on the fan or grid by clicking it. You can open the folder’s contents in a Finder window by clicking Open in Finder.
To configure how an individual stack’s icon behaves by using its contextual menu, right-click the stack icon to reveal its menu, as shown in Figure 1.7.
9781118677766-fg0107.eps1.7 Stacks have several configuration options.
The following options are included in the menu:
bullet.tif Sort By. Choose the attribute by which you want the items in the stack to be sorted. For example, choose Date Added to have the most recently added content appear at the bottom of the fan (if the stack is set to fan, of course).
bullet.tif Display As. Choose Stack to have the icon look like a stack, or choose Folder to replace the stack icon with the folder’s icon. The only difference is that when you select Folder, you always see the folder’s icon on the Dock, as opposed to the icon of the most recently added item, which is what you see when Stack is selected.
note.eps All Dock settings are specific to each user account; see Chapter 2 for more information. One user’s Dock settings do not affect another’s.
bullet.tif View Content As. Choose Fan to see the default fan layout for the stack (until it contains too many items, at which point it uses the grid instead). Select Grid to have the folder’s contents always appear in a grid. Select List to always display the contents in a columnar list; this is useful for folders that contain subfolders because you can select a subfolder to open its contents. Select Automatic to have OS X select the most appropriate view based on the folder’s contents.
bullet.tif Options. Choose Remove from Dock to remove the icon from the Dock. Choose Show in Finder to open a Finder window showing the folder’s contents.
bullet.tif Open. Choose this command to open the folder on the Desktop.
Changing the Dock’s appearance and behavior
The Dock offers several behaviors that you can change to suit your preferences. These steps walk you through how to change various aspects of the Dock’s appearance:
1. Open the Dock system preference.
2. Drag the Size slider to the right to make the default Dock larger, or drag it to the left to make it smaller. Note that the Dock doesn’t grow any larger when it’s completely full of icons, even if the slider isn’t all the way to the right.
note.eps When your MacBook Pro is connected to one or more external displays, the Dock in OS X Mavericks automatically appears on the active display, meaning the one where the pointer is. In previous OS X versions, the Dock appeared only on the primary display, which you could change in the Displays system preference’s Displays pane.
3. Select the Magnification check box if you want to magnify an area of the Dock when you point to it. Drag the Magnification slider to the right to increase the level of magnification or to the left to decrease it. This can make identifying items easier, especially if many items are on the Dock or when it is small.
4. Select the position of the Dock on the Desktop by clicking Left, Bottom (the default), or Right.
5. From the Minimize Windows Using pop-up menu, choose Genie Effect to pull windows down to the Dock in a swoop when you minimize them, or choose Scale Effect to shrink them straight down into the Dock.
6. If you want to be able to minimize a window by double-clicking its title bar, select the Double-Click a Window’s Title Bar to Minimize check box.
7. If you prefer windows that you minimize to move onto the related application’s icon instead of to a separate icon on the right side of the dividing line, select the Minimize Windows into Application Icon check box. With this setting enabled, you must open the application icon’s menu and select a minimized window to reopen it from the Dock, or switch back to the application and use its Window menu to choose the minimized window (unless the minimized window is also the application’s active window, in which case you move into it directly).
8. By default, application icons bounce as the application opens. If you don’t want this to happen, deselect the Animate Opening Applications check box.
9. If you want the Dock to be hidden automatically when you aren’t pointing to it, select the Automatically Hide and Show the Dock check box. If you set the Dock so that it is hidden except when you hover the pointer at the bottom of the screen, you can use more of your display.
10. To show the glowing dot icon under running applications, select the Show Indicator Lights for Open Applications check box. These lights are useful because they help you more easily identify open applications when you glance at the Dock, even hidden ones.
note.eps You can turn Dock Hiding on or off at any time by pressing Option+ mac command key +D.
Using the Launchpad
If you’ve used an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, you already know how to use the Launchpad on the Mac because it works in exactly the same manner as the Home pages on those devices. If you like the iOS style of accessing apps, the Launchpad provides one-click access to all your applications and utilities, and you can organize the Launchpad to make it work efficiently for you.
note.eps One difference between the Home pages on Apple mobile devices and the Launchpad is that only application icons can be stored on the Launchpad, whereas on an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, you can also store web page icons.
Click the Launchpad icon on the Dock (it is located just to the right of the Finder icon by default) or perform a three-finger pinch (three fingers pinched against your thumb) on the trackpad. This preference is enabled by default in the Trackpad system preference. The Launchpad then fills the Desktop, and you see icons on the current page, as shown in Figure 1.8. To move to a different page, drag two fingers on the trackpad to the left or to the right. As you drag, the page flips to the next or previous page. You can also search for an app by entering all or part of its name in the Search field at the top of the Launchpad.
9781118677766-fg0108.tif1.8 The Launchpad provides easy access to all your applications.
note.eps You’ll notice that the Dock remains visible if it isn’t hidden, or it becomes visible if it is hidden when the Launchpad is open. You can also use the Application Switcher while the Launchpad is displayed.
To open an application, click its icon. The Launchpad closes and switches to that application. Click a folder in the Launchpad to access the applications stored in it. The folder then expands, and you see the icons it contains, as shown in Figure 1.9.
To close the Launchpad without opening an application, click it (but not an application’s icon), perform a three-finger expand gesture on the trackpad, or press Esc.
note.eps The Launchpad is actually an application. Therefore, you can add its icon to the Sidebar, open it by double-clicking its icon in the Application folder, and so on.
9781118677766-fg0109.tif1.9 To access an app stored in a folder, click the folder’s icon and then click the application’s icon.
You can organize the icons on your Launchpad to make accessing them easier and faster. To change the location of icons on the Launchpad, open it and drag the icon you want to move to the desired location. You can change its location on the current page, or you can drag it off the screen to the left or right to move it to another page (you have to linger at the edge of the screen until the page changes). As you move one icon between others, they shift to make room for the one you are moving. When the icon is over the location you want, release it.
To create a new folder, drag one icon on top of another. Launchpad creates a new folder and tries to name it according to the type of applications you place together. The folder opens,