9.1. The System Preferences Window

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You can open System Preferences in dozens of ways. Most people choose its name from the menu or click its icon in the Dock, but if you have a laptop, Option-volume key (one of the speaker-adjustment keys on the top row of the keyboard) or Option-brightness keys opens System Prefs, too. (These tricks open the Sound and Displays panes, respectively, but you can then click Show All or press -L to see the full spread.)


Tip: If you know the name of the System Preferences panel you want, it's even quicker to use Spotlight. To open Energy Saver, for example, hit -Space, type ener , and then press -Enter. See Chapter 3 for more on operating Spotlight from the keyboard.

At first, the rows of icons are grouped according to function: Personal, Hardware, and so on (Figure 9-2, top). But you can also view them in tidy alphabetical order, as shown at bottom in Figure 9-2. That can spare you the ritual of hunting through various rows just to find a certain panel icon whose name you already know. (Quick, without looking: Which row is Date & Time in?) This chapter describes the various panels following this alphabetical arrangement.

Either way, when you click one of the icons, the corresponding controls appear in the main System Preferences window. To access a different preference pane, you have a number of options:

  • Fast : When System Preferences first opens, the insertion point is blinking in the new System Preferences search box. (If the insertion point is not blinking there, press -F.) Type a few letters of volume, resolution, wallpaper, wireless , or whatever feature you want to adjust. In a literal illustration of Spotlight's power, the System Preferences window darkens except for the icons where you'll find relevant controls (see Figure 9-1). Click the name or icon of the one that looks most promising .


    Tip: It's worth remembering that you can also use the regular Spotlight menu, the one on your menu bar, to find and open up a certain System Preferences pane.

    Figure 9-1. Even if you don't know what System Preferences panel contains the settings you want to change, Spotlight can help. Type into the box at the top, and watch as the "spotlight" shines on the relevant icons. At that point, you can either click the icon, click the name in the pop-up menu, or arrow down the menu and press Enter to choose. (Apple removed the System Preferences toolbar, but it hopes that this Spotlight business is just as useful.)


  • Fast : Click the Show All icon in the upper-left corner of the window (or press -L, a shortcut worth learning). Then click the icon of the new panel you want.


    Tip: Shift-click any System Preferences icon to make its panel open in luxurious slow motion.
  • Faster : Choose any panel's name from the View menuor, if System Preferences is already open, from the System Preferences Dock icon .

  • Fastest : Highlight the first System Preferences icon by pressing Tab. (The highlighting is very faint, but it's there.) Then type the first couple of letters of the icon you want to highlight p for Print & Fax, di for Displays, or whateverand then press the Space bar to open that panel.


Tip: Miss the toolbar that, in previous Mac OS X versions, gave you quick access to the panes you use the most? Then try this radical trick. Copy the old System Preferences application from a Mac with Panther still installed. It still runs fine in Tiger, although you lose the Search box.

Figure 9-2. You can view your System Preferences icons alphabetically (bottom), rather than in rows of arbitrary categories (top); just choose View Organize Alphabetically. This approach not only saves space, but also makes finding a certain panel much easier, because you dont need to worry about which category it's in.


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Mac OS X. The Missing Manual
Mac OS X Snow Leopard: The Missing Manual (Missing Manuals)
ISBN: 0596153287
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 506
Authors: David Pogue

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