To attach a file to a message in Mac OS X Mail:
Grab the file you want to attach in a Finder window or from the desktop.
Drop it on the Mac OS X Mail Dock icon.
You can also drop the file on a message composition window.
Mac OS X Mail automatically inserts the file as an attachment.
Hey guys,
Anyone out there have the new model Apple desk top? I wanted to attach a file to my email but I noticed there is nothing in the toolbar that allows the user to attach a file?
This is frustrating. I could hang the people in my computer department who recommended that I get an Apple desktop. The PC computer I have at my work office, though complicated, at least has the features I need or look for. With this Apple I could not find the attach file button something so basic but is not to be found!
Dam!!!!:roll:
Not being able to figure out how to use a Macintosh is not the fault of the Macintosh. Indeed, given that a consistent, logical, intuitive user interface as long been one of the Macintosh's big selling points, it doesn't make you look at all good to complain in a public forum that you can't figure out how to use it.
Hey guys,
Anyone out there have the new model Apple desk top? I wanted to attach a file to my email but I noticed there is nothing in the toolbar that allows the user to attach a file?
This is frustrating. I could hang the people in my computer department who recommended that I get an Apple desktop. The PC computer I have at my work office, though complicated, at least has the features I need or look for. With this Apple I could not find the attach file button something so basic but is not to be found!
Dam!!!!:roll:
Your complaint is about as stupid somebody saying Whirlpool sucks because they can't further out how to bake a pie. :roll:
Edit: If you haven't smashed it yet, I'll buy it off of you for $50.
In addition, lets say you want to update your Mac, maybe add some ram, new video card. Better get ready to PAY.
And now they use pentium processors, so they are just as succeptable [sic] to viruses as any other computer.
Hey guys,
Anyone out there have the new model Apple desk top? I wanted to attach a file to my email but I noticed there is nothing in the toolbar that allows the user to attach a file?
This is frustrating. I could hang the people in my computer department who recommended that I get an Apple desktop. The PC computer I have at my work office, though complicated, at least has the features I need or look for. With this Apple I could not find the attach file button something so basic but is not to be found!
Dam!!!!:roll:
Modern Macintoshes use the same RAM, video cards, and other accessories that modern PCs do. It costs the same to buy such an accessory regardless of whether you intend to put it in a PC or a Macintosh.
The susceptibility to malware is a function of the operating system, not of the CPU. MacOS X is based on Unix, which has been an inherently-secure operating system since long before Windows existed. And it's just as secure running on an Intel processor as it ever was running on a PowerPC processor, and as its ancestor, NeXTStep was running on a 68030 or 68040. Unix, in any form, always has and always will be more secure than Windows ever will be. This isn't to say that no malware ever has or ever will exist to target MacOS X; but it remains an unalterable fact that it always has and always will be more difficult and less effective to target MacOS X or any other Unix-based system with malware than it ever has or ever will be to similarly target Windows.
It's not easy to make the switch from PC to Mac. One misses things like a print screen button, use of the home and end keys, stuff like that.
Thank God for Google. W/o Google I would have given up on the Mac I use.
It copies the screenshot to the clipboard.The Print Screen button on a modern Windows machine doesn't appear to do anything, so what is there to miss?
They do not.As far as Home, End, Page-Up, Page-Down, and so on, the Macintosh has these (at least, mine does), and they work about the same way as on a Widows machine.
It copies the screenshot to the clipboard.
They do not.
home and end move the cursor to the beginning or end of a line on a PC
on a Mac they move the focus of the screen, but not the cursor, to the top or bottom of a page.
I know. I used Google.Oh, you're right. Well, sort of.
Try using the arrow keys while holding down the command key. Command-left moves the cursor to the start of the line, command-right to the end, and so on. If it really bothers you, there are any number of free or inexpensive utilities that you can use to remap the Home, End, and other keys to the key combinations that do what you want.
I know. I used Google.
It's not easy to make the switch from PC to Mac. One misses things like a print screen button, use of the home and end keys, stuff like that.
Thank God for Google. W/o Google I would have given up on the Mac I use.
Also, the shift + capslock on Mac's is screwy too.
Given how much confidence you were speaking with earlier about PCs, one would assume that you had more experience with PCs than it seems you do.
I am not so sure that your opinion about the relative merits of one v the other is that well informed.
Also, the shift + capslock on Mac's is screwy too.
Not interested in playing OS wars w/ you.It's ... NeXTStep.
Hey guys,
Anyone out there have the new model Apple desk top? I wanted to attach a file to my email but I noticed there is nothing in the toolbar that allows the user to attach a file?
This is frustrating. I could hang the people in my computer department who recommended that I get an Apple desktop. The PC computer I have at my work office, though complicated, at least has the features I need or look for. With this Apple I could not find the attach file button something so basic but is not to be found!
Dam!!!!:roll:
Modern Macintoshes use the same RAM, video cards, and other accessories that modern PCs do. It costs the same to buy such an accessory regardless of whether you intend to put it in a PC or a Macintosh.
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