10/22/2023 0 Comments Mailtags yosemiteThere’s also a new option to display an Overlay Calendar-if you also need to know today’s date in the Islamic, Hebrew, or Chinese lunar calendars, Calendar can now display them alongside the Gregorian calendar system. It beats the cramped space in the floating inspector palette. If you create a new event in this view, the inspector pane is where you enter in all the calendar information. It’s still a two-pane view, but instead of the (fairly redundant) two daily schedule panes found in Mavericks, it’s a single schedule pane and an inspector pane that shows you all the details of a selected calendar event. When you create a new event, it attempts to learn from previous events you’ve created and tries to autocomplete your event with likely dates and even attendees-if you often create a “Lunch with Jim” event on Tuesdays at 12:30, and you type “Lunch,” Calendar will suggest Lunch with Jim, at 12:30, with Jim invited. You can select Do Not Disturb to no longer receive notifications from an ongoing group conversation, or click the Leave Conversation link to drop out completely.Īpple’s Calendar app hasn’t undergone as many changes in Yosemite, but there are a few worth noting. Perhaps most importantly, the new Messages lets you control group conversations that you might want to bail out of-or just not be interrupted by. And just to help you keep track of your conversations, you can give each of your group chats a distinct name, like “Dinner Plans.” You can also kick off phone calls, individual chats, or FaceTime sessions directly from the Details window, and add or remove participants. You and your interlocutors can share your locations using the Find My Friends infrastructure, and the Details view will draw a map showing where every participant is located. Group messages get a new Details button (though the button looks like hyperlinked text, iOS style, rather than a standard Mac interface element) that brings up a raft of options. Group iMessaging also gets a big boost in Messages. The Details view in Messages shows a map and gives you group controls. With this new feature, especially on iOS, it’ll be easy for us to hear each other’s voices without demanding immediate attention with a phone call. One of the reasons I text my friends and family instead of phoning them is that most of the time, I don’t need to interrupt what they’re doing right that second in order to get an immediate response-it’s just not that important. Maybe some of that fancy speech-recognition technology could be brought to bear on these messages, so they were searchable (and even glanceable) without having to play them back one by one?īut there’s still a lot to be said for asynchronous audio conversations. I’m also not thrilled with what a chat window looks like after a series of audio messages: it’s just bubbles of audio files going back and forth, entirely inscrutable. In my testing, Soundbites worked as promised, though the audio quality left a lot to be desired-messages sounded more like lousy telephone connections than what I’ve come to expect from computer audio. ![]() The Markup controls are pretty simple-they feel more like an iOS app than a part of Mail, to be honest-but they definitely did the job once I got the hang of them. I kept pressing Command-Z in order to undo mistakes I made in Markup, and it did nothing. Marking up a file really does feel like you’re using a different program entirely-but one without keyboard shortcuts or a menu bar. ![]() Unfortunately, I’m not thrilled about the implementation. You can stick your signature on PDFs without ever leaving Mail. In this case, Apple’s written a Markup extension that lets you draw lines, shapes, text, and more on PDFs and images. Markup is an Extension that lets you modify images and PDFs in place in Mail.Įxtensions technology that’s debuting in both Yosemite and iOS 8, in which code from an entirely separate application can appear inside another app’s window. Click it and select Markup, and the item zooms out, with a toolbar appearing directly above the item. Here’s how it works: You click on a file and an icon appears in the top-left corner of the file’s preview. You just need to remember not to put your Mac to sleep or shut it down after you’ve sent your message, because your large file may still be uploading in the background.Īnother interesting idea added to Mail this time around is a feature called Markup, which allows you to add simple annotations to images and PDFs from directly within a Mail window. ![]() I don’t mind using Dropbox (or back in the day, YouSendIt) to exchange files with friends, but it’s a multi-step workaround-and this is as simple and direct as it gets. This is a quintessential Apple feature, eliminating a common headache without forcing the user to change their behavior at all.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |