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Mac Tip: Command-Drag-and-Drop to Move files… not Copy

Sometime when you’re dragging files from one drive to another, experiment with holding down some of the command keys (Shift, Control, Option and Command) and you’ll notice that the cursor will change to indicate that you’re about to do something a little different than the usual.

If you hold down the Option key as you drag-and-drop files, you’ll create copies of those files whether you’re dragging from one drive to another or even within the same directory. The cursor changes to show a plus in a green bubble to let you know what’s about to happen.

If you hold down the Option and Command keys while dragging and dropping files, the cursor will be appended by a little curved arrow—the same curved arrow that you see on files at are aliases to other files…because that is what you are about to create. You won’t actually move the file at all but you’ll instead create a kind of link to the original accessible from the alias.

But if you hold down the Command key while you drag-and-drop, you’ll see now change to the cursor at all. Odd, since this maneuver does do something special. Usually when you move files from one folder to another within the same drive, the file disappears from where it was and will now be found in the place where you dragged it.

But, if you drag a file from one drive to another, you make a copy—the same file on both drives…unless… Unless you hold down the Command key while you drag the file. Then you move the file. It is removed from its original resting place and is now to be found only in its new home.

Just a little tip for you.

Opera Spotlight

Opera has been around for ages. Thanks to a recent change of heart (or

business model) by the Norwegian software company you can now download and

use the Opera browser free of charge. While previous free versions were

saddled with ads, not Opera sings a different tune.

So, to get in on the fun, run over to

href="http://opera.com/download/index.dml?platform=mac"

target="_blank">Opera.com and download your copy. Not convinced? Check

out the browser’s unique features:

Speed

I’m used to browsing with a tn of extensions loaded in Firefox, so when I

took off with Opera, I was suprised at the speed. I found it even quicker

than Firefox without extensions. That’s saying something, considering that

Opera is loading a mail and newsfeed client as well.

operatoolbar Opera Spotlight

Polished Interface

Opera’s interface sports a great balance of function, simplicity and polish.

Address options emerge only when you click on the web address. Other options

are so well tucked away you forget about them (the mail and chat client –

for example). Everywhere you go in the browser, you find things taking up

the minimal space, and put in just the right place.

operamail Opera Spotlight

The Mail Client

The mail client, complete with IMAP and POP support and spam filtering, is –

you guessed it – fast. The import wizard actually supports Mac Mail clients

including Thunderbird and Mail.app. Contacts are intuitively managed. Both

mail and contacts fit into the main window on tabs.

Customizing Opera

You can tweak everything from your themes and sidebars to menus and mouse

gestures. Opera’s portal also offers a photo album, blog and web-based

email. There’s even a tutorial for making your own theme.

operanotes Opera Spotlight

Odds and Ends

Another thing I liked was the fact that the RSS reader is actually a reader,

not some kind of feed-bookmark thing. I also thought the notes were nice.

Together with “copy to note” and spellcheck Opera could be your next text

editor too.

Gripes

Opera is a lot of fun, but you have to meet a lot of criteria to become my

default browser. For most of my browsing, I’ll have to stick with Firefox,

thanks to extensions and standards support not found in Opera. While Opera

imports all kinds of settings including bookmarks, contacts and mail

accounts, it does not export to any formats besides its own.

The Fat Lady Sings

For many, the new free status of Opera is huge. I have to admit, it is a

superb browsing experience – fast and feature packed. For those not heavily

invested in Firefox add-ons or Safari’s ease, Opera makes a great browsing

choice. Who knows, maybe someday it might make default.

Brian

Safarific Browser Add-ons

Safari may not be your default browser, but if you have Jaguar or better, you have it. Now, you can get more out of it with great add-ons and enjoy cool new features in the beta. And, for those of you stranded on Windows you can finally join the party.

Safari 3 beta

We know its fast. And its given that the beta will be buggy. But there are some other lesser-know but cool features. Tabs can be dragged between windows. Inline find and resizable text fields add Apple suave to your browsing.

While its not a 100% Mac experience, Safari on Windows is a nice change and very fast. Finally, Safari is a cross-platform experience.

SafariPlus

Safari doesn’t support extensions like Firefox, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t usefull add-ons. Take SafariPlus: with it you can take control of your cookies and block annoying animations. And don’t worry, there’s already an alpha version compatible with the 3.0 beta.

PicLens

Enhance your image browsing experience with this great add-on for Safari. PicLens transforms Flickr and other popular image sites into a slick light-box style full-screen interface with instant image loading and even Apple remote support.

Creammonkey

We’ve featured this project before. This user script add-on for Safari has matured to .9 and added support for more Greasemonkey functions – making it more compatible with user scripts hosted at userscripts.org.

SurfRabbit

Want to alter the display of webpages without user scripts? SurfRabbit supports the whole family of WebKit browsers, and allows you to reshape how pages display in your browser. Cleaning up sites littered with clutter is as easy as selecting the elements you don’t want to see.

Happy surfin’ Safari!

Brian