electronic cigarette 2011

16/02/2011 11:22

Sometimes the Edit » Paste or Command+V is not active on some registration fields in software. For instance to register applications like LED Watch CrossOver. The same issue when trying to copy from such fields via Edit » Copy or Command+C to copy out the serial number to store it in a database or spreadsheet for a permanent record.

 

One thing to try is to Control+click over the field and then select Paste (or Copy) from the contextual menu. This will often work even when the main menu does not.

 

[crarko adds: This sort of behavior goes all the way back to the classic Mac OS days. Obviously software vendors don't want the serial numbers passed around but in any kind of a managed environment you'd like to keep a master list of the software assets you have, and that includes the registration keys. Having done this and knowing how big a pain it can be to keep a proper inventory I'm a bit sensitive to the electronic cigarette

issue. I publish this hint for as much as anything as a Many ex-Windows users are frustrated by the fact that (in a standard Snow Leopard installation), there is no way to move files/folders using only the keyboard. In Windows, this is a Ctrl+X/Ctrl+V keystroke pair. In OS X, the Command+X equivalent is not enabled in the Finder.

 

I have developed an easy way to get equivalent functionality for free using by creating an Automator service in OS X 10.6.

 

There are some shareware utilities to enable 'Command+X' -- but for relatively Laser pointer minor functionality, they are big RAM hogs. Besides, I think that cutting and pasting a file is illogical and not directly connected to what the you are doing - you are really moving the file!

 

My Automator workflow is called 'Move Selected Items.' I have bound it to the keyboard shortcut of Command+Control+M. To install it and assign the keyboard shortcut: Simple task lists seems to be all the rage apple peel 520 lately. I've seen quite a few of them hit the Mac App Store, such as Todolicious and Tictoc.

 

I've been using a freely available alternative -- Google Tasks. The only problem is that you can only access it through a browser. Luckily, there is a clever little app call Fluid that can make a webpage into an app. So with the help of Fluid, I have created a small menubar app that does essentially the same thing as the paid alternatives, albeit maybe not as pretty.

 

One of the big advantages of using Google Tasks is that it's always in sync. It's also possible to view on my iPhone by going to https://www.gmail.com/tasks. And it has the possibility to create several different task lists, which I find very useful ps3 jailbreak.

 

 

Related posts:

https://www.soulcast.com/post/show/909726/electric-cigarette-2011

https://omini.weebly.com/1/post/2011/02/2011-wopad.html

https://omini.blogs.experienceproject.com/678462.html