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In some ways, just buying a Macintosh is a renegade act of self-expression. But that's only the beginning. Now it's time to fashion the computer screen itself according to your personal sense of design and fashion. 4.5.1. System PreferencesCosmetically speaking, Mac OS X offers two dramatic full-screen features: desktop backgrounds and screen savers. (That's not counting the pictures and colors you can apply to individual folder windows , as described on Section 1.4.1.5.) The command center for both of these functions is the System Preferences program (which longtime Mac and Windows fans may recognize as the former Control Panels). Open it by clicking the System Preferences icon in the Dock or by choosing its name from the menu.
When the System Preferences program opens, you can choose a desktop picture or screen saver by clicking the Desktop & Screen Saver button. For further details on these System Preferences panes, see Chapter 9. 4.5.2. Graphic Designers' Corner: The Gray LookOne of the earliest objections to the lively, brightly colored look of Mac OS X came from Apple's core constituency: artists and graphic designers. Some complained that Mac OS X's bright blues (of scroll bar handles, progress bars, the menu, pulsing OK buttons, highlighted menu names and commands), along with the red, green, and yellow window-corner buttons , threw off their color judgment. These features have been greatly toned down since the original version of Mac OS X. The pulsing effects are subtler, the three-dimensional effects are less drastic, and the button colors are less intense . But in case they still bother artists, Apple created what it calls the Graphite look for Mac OS X, which turns all of those interface elements gray instead of blue. To try out this look, choose System Preferences; click Appearance; and then choose Graphite from the Appearance pop-up menu. Tip: The Highlight Color pop-up menu lets you choose a different accent color for your Mac world. This is the background color of highlighted text, the colored oval that appears around highlighted icon names, and a window's " lining " as you drag an icon into it. 4.5.3. Desktop SoundsDesktop sounds are the tiny sound effects that accompany certain mouse drags . And we're talking tiny they're so subdued that you might not have noticed them. But there are more of them in Tiger than ever before. You hear a little plink/crunch when you drop an icon onto the Trash, a boingy thud when you drag something into a folder, a whoof ! when you drag something off the Dock and into oblivion, and so on. The little thud that you hear at the end of a file-copying job is actually useful, because it alerts you that the task is complete. If all that racket is keeping you awake, however, it's easy enough to turn it off. Open System Preferences, click the Sound icon, and turn off "Play user interface sound effects." And if you decide to leave them turned on, please use discretion when working in a library, neurosurgical operating room, or church . |
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