![]() ![]() Instead he supported and added more features to the utility. Unlike with lot of these utilities, Thomson didn’t sell it to a large company or give up on it. The Macs I use today employ that same configuration.Īnd developer James Thomson kept up with it. In my case, I created one dock for my currently running applications and another for applications I used routinely. Beyond being a way to launch applications with a single click, the docks you created could be used to access or launch a variety of items-folders, devices on a local network, servers, URLs, and so on. ![]() I liked what I saw, and for a variety of reasons. In those days, it was available as shareware and could be downloaded from I believe it was our own Jason Snell (he was about 8 years old at the time) who one day suggested, “If you’d like a dock launcher, you should take a look at (With OS 9, Apple instituted its own single-button launching utility aptly called Launcher.) I tried every dock utility I could lay my hands on. Similar to the dock you find in today’s Mac OS X, these tools allowed you to place your favorite applications in an always-present window and launch them with a single click. It was around this time that dock utilities became popular. And while that was a better solution than rooting around in one folder or another seeking a favorite application, it still required a fair bit of mousing around and dealing with menus that could be quite clumsy. ![]() (Yes, this was a really big deal at the time). Now Menus component, which placed hierarchical menus within the Apple menu. In those dockless days, launching an application was pretty tedious: Dig down into one folder or another, double-click the item you sought, and you were on your way. One of the areas that developers found particularly interesting was application launching. ResEdit to place the ugliest fonts imaginable in the menu bar, and, oh, thoseįlying toasters. You could slap themes on your Mac sixteen ways to Sunday, use Under Mac OS 9 and earlier, those developers had greater opportunities to muck with the Finder and low-level functions on the Mac. Third-party developers made some interesting efforts to deal with that clumsiness. Broadband? Is 2400 baud broad enough for you, buddy? In short, powerful and cool though my Power Mac 6100 and, later, Power Computing Power Tower 180e, seemed at the time, the Mac OS was still on the clumsy side. You say you’d like to share a printer with the other computers in your home? Take a class. What, you want your Mac to operate for an entire day without crashing? Dreamer. Oh sure, you still double-clicked this and dragged that, but things we take for granted just didn’t exist in those days. (Apple changed its OS naming scheme from System This to Mac OS That when it moved from System 7.5 to Mac OS 7.6.) In these earlier days of the Mac’s operating system you couldn’t fling a brick in any compass direction without hitting some utility that attempted to make that operating system better (or more attractive or, in far too many cases, goofier).įor those who weren’t there, the pre-OS X Mac OS was quite a different beast. In truth, Apple has left a long trail of OS revisions in its wake-from System 1.x to Mac OS 9.x. “Force Empty Trash” deletes locked files.For many people-particularly those who’ve come to the Mac after first using an iOS device-there was and always has been Mac OS X. This action will reveal its background view, allowing you to grab it and move it to your liking To reposition the Trash on your Desktop click the Reposition Trash menu item.Right-clicking on the Trash Can opens a contextual menu.A single click (left-click) on TrashEye’s icon opens the Bin folder.Sliding the switch to On in the Preferences window, displays a Trash icon in the bottom left corner of your Desktop.It also has practically zero impact on both CPU and memory. What’s remarkable about TrashEye is its real-time refresh rate. ![]() I am quite obsessive about not deleting something by mistake, and assume others are like me, that’s the reason for the big red badge. What’s more with my bad eyesight, I needed a big red badge for the total count (the typical Apple NSColor.red for badges), in order to not have to stare for long seconds at the icon to read its count. If I remember correctly, Bin-it was even limited to the local Trash (i.e. However, all of these were not real-time, sometimes taking several seconds to refresh their content. Some of you may have even know the original Mac OS 9 trash can! Lately, I even tried iCollections’ Trash pane without much success. Like many of you, I got used to the Trash Can on the Desktop with DragThing that I later replaced with Bin-it until the latter was also discontinued. With my laptop’s small display, I have Dock-hiding always turned on anyway the trash icon doesn’t show the file count and a quick Command-Option-D brings it back. ![]()
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