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In Mac OS X there are some applications which live only in the menubar, over on the right hand side. Then there are other applications which to have an application window to look at, but also have the extra ability to get to the functions of the application from a menubar item. In this video I have a look at a few of the menubar items I have on my own iMac computer. We take a look at the ScreenFlow, Dropbox and Skype menubar icons briefly and I also look at a few others in more detail. Pop clip is basically a utility which gives you extra context sensitive options when you have something selected. So at the cursor point I see the option to do a cut, copy or paste. When I first put it on, it did seem to me to be slightly intrusive, but now I have been using it for some time I would be lost without it. Keyboard Maestro is an application which brings automation to your Mac, and at one level it is very easy. At another more geeky level it is extremely powerful and is very suitable... read full post When you take into consideration the miserable record of efficiency, the need for 100% backup, the periods of no wind, the extremely high maintenance costs, the lack of maintenance performed at ANY price, the health hazards to animals and people alike, the blight on America's landscape and the fact that this industry cannot survive without tax-payer subsidies; wind power needs to blow away. As this article states: "An expert on the detrimental aspects of wind power, John Droz, Jr., has created a website for those interested in the facts. Droz notes that “wind energy was abandoned well over a hundred years ago as it was totally inconsistent with our burgeoning, more modern needs of power, even in the late 1800s.” It is an outmoded source of power comparable to plowing farmland using oxen." Liked by merriemarie When you install Windows 7 on your computer, it creates a small partition called the "System Reserved" partition, along with the large partition on which it installs the operating system. It doesn't have a drive letter assigned to it, but you'll see it if you use Diskpart or other low-level disk management utilities. It's used to hold the Boot Manager Code and Boot Configuration database, and also reserves space to be used by BitLocker if you should decide to encrypt your drive with it. However, you can install Windows 7 without creating this little partition, if you know how. Liked by Disha patel |
