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Usb overdrive pan up
Usb overdrive pan up













usb overdrive pan up
  1. Usb overdrive pan up Pc#
  2. Usb overdrive pan up mac#
  3. Usb overdrive pan up windows#

Most geeky folk who have a solid understanding of an OS will want as many buttons on a mouse as possible.

Usb overdrive pan up mac#

crowd seems to miss is that the mac is made for simplicity for the average joe who never used a computer. and OT at that!)Īpple kept to a one button mouse for ease of us and to prevent user confusion. But that's largely mitigated by the consistency and utility of standard shortcuts. no direct equivalent to Windows's Alt+F (file menu) S (save)). Not to say that it's perfect - some GUI navigation's a bit half-assed (i.e.

Usb overdrive pan up windows#

Having used Windows in all its variations since Win 3.11, and a Mac since 2001, I've got to say that I find the Mac's approach rather more elegant. It's not all that often it's used as menu or dialog shortcuts. The Control key's a bit of an oddity on the Mac. The menu options will toggle between their standard and alternative uses.

usb overdrive pan up

If Get Info is the Mac equivalent of Properties, the Inspector is a variant of the Properties window that dynamically updates based on the current selection.įor those who have access to a Mac, try dropping down a menu and tapping the Option key. For example, Cmd+I in Finder shows the Get Info (Properties for Win folk) panel. Option is a modifier, most often used to slightly alter the behaviour of a Command+ shortcut. Cmd+O (in Finder, and most apps) open, Cmd+S save, etc. On the Mac, Command (the Apple Key, or the 'Splat' key) is the 'do something' key. I've yet to see it do anything particularly useful. There's a few notable uses (Win+D - show desktop, Win+E open Explorer, Win - show start menu). That'll be the context menu key, which is used by about 3 people in the universe.

usb overdrive pan up

The Win Key isn't used for contextual actions. There's nothing any more intuitive about either approach (though I do despise the Windows key - I still use an IBM Model M at home, which helps me avoid it).

usb overdrive pan up

Just goes to show, though, that Apple's keyboard layouts and one-button mice are no less confusing than what's used in the x86 world. I'd try to do something at work and they'd say "oh, just press command-control-comma" and I'd be like "huh? Command Control? Goddamn kids today." Then I'd put in my dentures and tell those little whippersnappers to get the hell off my lawn.

Usb overdrive pan up Pc#

I switched to PC after the Apple II and for the longest time I had no friggin' idea what modern Mac guys were talking about whenever they'd tell me to press the "command" key on a Mac. Old-school Apple guys still use the term "Apple key", unless they're talking to people they know are relative n00bs. That's what it was officially called in the Apple II days (there were two separate keys back then one an outline of an apple called "Open-Apple", one a filled-in apple called "Closed-Apple"), and even the early Mac days. Not for nothing, but "longtime" Apple users actually would know this better as the Apple key. The PC world has actually ripped this off twice - first by mapping the standard Apple Cmd shortcuts to Ctrl, then by adding the Windows key, which apparently is kind of like the Apple key except it does something different in every program.įWIW, I agree that mapping multi-button mouse options to $KEY + click is a pain in the ass, but the proliferation of keys really is a separate issue.Īpple, usually called "Cmd", short for "command", by longtime users (that's what the four-leaf clover is, I don't know why) Option: Macs have always had these at some point they started including the "Alt" label to indicate the equivalent PC key.Īpple, usually called "Cmd", short for "command", by longtime users (that's what the four-leaf clover is, I don't know why): The most commonly used key on Macs, and again, it has nothing to do with the number of buttons on the mouse it activates most keyboard shortcuts. Every laptop I've ever owned, PC or Mac, has used something similar.Ĭtrl: Same as the Ctrl key on PC keyboards, laptop or desktop. This has nothing to do with the number of mouse buttons.įn: this is to activate options that would be separate keys on a full-size desktop keyboard.















Usb overdrive pan up