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on 3/3/03 12:53 AM, Don Smith
wrote about understanding file structure on the MAC.:
I think it relates to the inability
to navigate the file system and the inability to differentiate
between a program, a document and a folder. OSX, I think,
makes the filing structure a bit easier to understand with
the column display that shows where files are in the hierarchy.
I
cannot agree with Don more. I have always had a problem following “order” whether
it be in computers or life. The original MAC filing system,
designed to be user friendly and forgiving, allowed us to put
stuff wherever we wanted. Most folks I come across insist on
using the desktop, as their main file repository. Personally,
I can't stand opening my computer to that clutter. OSX new
column “Finder View” does make seeing the “paths” to
your files a bit more obvious.
Whenever you use the Open/Save file menu, you
are confronted with a single folder with a drop down menu.
Clicking on the little triangle on the right, next to the drop
down, opens the dialog into a column view allowing you to navigate
easily wherever you want in your hard drive, or to another
drive you might have connected.
While this is relatively easy to grasp in concept,
OSX adds a bit of wrinkle to this type of filing, especially
when you are trying to attach a file from YOUR desktop.
I highlight your desktop because
that is the key (to some confusion as well). OSX is designed
on top of a UNIX core as a multi-user OS. Even if you are the
only user of your machine, OSX has created a folder especially
for YOU inside the USERS folder which is in
the ROOT or Main Part of your hard drive.
When
attaching a file, using the file manager or Open/Save dialog
window - OSX programs most always will open into your Documents
folder which is within the first level of your Macintosh
HD: >users folder. The Open/Save dialogs
have a little triangle on the right side that will take you
into the “column view” and then allow you navigate
to the folder of your choosing (or back to the root where you
can navigate to any other drive you have connected).
You
can create as many folders inside the Documents folder as
you wish. For quick easy access – I drag the
Documents folder from a Finder window into my DOCK. That creates
an alias or “Link” of the folder which - with a
right click (for those who are using multiple button mice or
trackballs) or click and hold, pops up a listing of that folder.
You then have direct access to the files/folders within, without
having to open the finder window.
When
I am training people new to OSX, I have noticed that many of
you who are ICON file folder users, have difficulty using listed
windows. Often the impulse is to double click the hard
drive icon which will display an icon window, which you then
navigate opening window over window. In order to break
this awkward and time consuming process, I hide the desktop
drive ICONS in the Finder Preferences.
"Why would you do a mean thing like that,
Avi? The MAC is supposed to let me work the way that
I want to! Why do I need lists of files and folders,
when I can easily navigate using folder ICONS?"
The answer is simply this: ORGANIZATION
OSX
wants to help keep you organized. Many
of you may have never created nested folders that are more
than one or two layers deep. Some LIBRARY folders are
nested 10 folders deep with OSX. That's a bunch of open
windows in ICON view, cluttering up the desktop. You
may never have to negotiate a Library folder, but my guess
is someday you WILL need to, especially trying to troubleshoot
some software re-install that you are having a problem with.
Try
forcing yourself to use alphabetized lists and pop-up lists
from the dock folders that you can drag/create there from
the finder. Your work flow will speed up dramatically,
and you will misplace files less frequently.
I
have taken to storing everything including CLIENT folders
and websites within my DOCUMENTS folder. I
use the other folders in my HOME directory for music and pictures. I
create alias to other drives within the MOVIES folder, because
most of my video work is too large for my main drive, where
the user>avi>Documents folder lives.
Dragging
the "HOME" icon into the
DOCK gives you direct access to these other folders as well
as the documents folder with a click and hold over the dock
ICON or a right click. A right click or control click
pops up the list a bit quicker. Control click calls up contextual
menus under OSX Finder and other programs. If you use a two
button mouse or trackball, a right click does the same thing
(as Control-Click).
These
little shortcuts can save you time from moving your mouse all
over your physical desktop to find related functions. Try
using control click, or better yet go out and buy a USB two
button mouse or trackball. FYI - I use a MacAlly QBALL -
optical trackball. Using a trackball is a bit daunting
for some users used to dragging a mouse around their desktop. But
I find it saves my wrist and has abated the oncoming "carpel
tunnel syndorme" that I was developing, spending
hours a day "mousing around". My 80 year old
Mother also likes her trackball. She finds it easier
to roll the ball to where she wants, then remove her fingers
from the ball to click. With arthritis, she found it
difficult to hold the mouse still, while trying to click on
something.
Adjusting
your work habits to these new features built into OSX will
make you a more efficient MAC user. After
all, aren't computers supposed to save us time? (Yeah,
right Avi. I spend more time at my computer, then I ever spent
over an adding machine or calculator. But I do have more
FUN working with my MAC, and I am better informed! - DOH!)
You
will also notice that there is a folder (in each user’s folder) called “Desktop”. So
each user can create his/her own desktop look and files structure.
This filing system concept that is a bit daunting at first,
but it really does help to make us create a filing structure
with some “order”. I don’t misplace files
as often as I used to under OS9.
This
multi-user approach is most useful in a home where many people
use the same computer, and in office environments where an
individual’s files, preferences
and security are important. Another thing that Apple recommends
is to create a “regular user” in addition to the
first user that you set up. By this they mean a user with normal
access privileges instead of Administrator rights that the
first user has.
This helps to reduce the possibility of moving
or damaging critical system files or folders.
You
will notice that when you do this (create and log in as the
second user) you will NOT have access to your original user’s folder. You will have to move your
files from the original users documents or desktop folders
into the Shared folder temporarily, so that the new user will
have access to them. Then “Log Out” and back in
with the new user you have created. You will have to remember
your password as well, and use it.
You can also use the original user with Administrator
rights, to create additional users. You can also set up these
users with their own Applications folder to limit their access
to programs you might not want them to use. This is a bit of
a task, because many programs store their preferences in different
places.
Some times these preferences contain a serial
number which a certain program needs in order to function.
You may have to enter this serial number separately for each
user that you set up.
Another
way to get around this is to copy the preference from the
original user’s folder. This usually
can be found in the HD:/users/Library/Preferences folder. Again
you will have to copy this file into the common shared folder,
then switch into the other users, in order to copy it into
their Library/Preferences folder. The same can be done with
the Applications themselves making a separate copy into the
individual users folder.
If
you want to always use this “second
user” as your main log in, you can set up this user to
log in automatically when the computer starts by going to the
System Preferences/Accounts folder.
Select the user that you want and then click
the Set Auto Login Button. Make sure that
if you do this, you can remember the original user’s
password (you can actually use the same password if you choose). If
you forget it, you won’t be able to get back into the
Administrator user.
Avi
Learner is co-owner of ADWEB Services a South Florida
web design and hosting service specializing in Filemaker
Pro database driven websites and cross platform Networking
Integration. He is a regular contributor to the Gold
Coast Mac User group newsletter, Tropical Mac.
Copyright© 2003
Avi Learner avi@adweb.biz
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