Useful. As an older person entirely committed to the Apple ecosystem, I love how my Apple devices work together seamlessly. Having grown up with basic computers with few system resources, I still to this day close applications through a misplaced fear of running out of memory. And much as I love Apple, I do get overwhelmed with the constant updates and changes. Mind you, my recollection of endless Windows updates keeps me grounded - yuck 🤪
It's easier on Mac than ever on Windows, and it keeps improving. Stay tuned for more tips, and make sure to reach out if you need help (even just holding your hand through an upgrade so you don't panic)...
I use a third-party HTML signature tool called email signature rescue... you can find it here: emailsignaturerescue.com There are lots of sites that can do that for you... or you can even hire someone on Fiverr or Upwork to create one for you, eliminating the need for a subscription.
Uh oh, I found an issue. If I right click on "mail", it does not give me the options you are showing. For example, the option to "start new email" is not there.
Walk me through how you did it and what went wrong. It totally works on MacOS 15... Here are some pointers.... 1. Make sure you grab the applications folder from inside your HD on the sidebar 2. Make sure you drag it to the right of the far right dividing line 3. Make sure you don't drop the folder on another folder, but hold it between items so the dock makes space for it... Let me know how it goes...
Hi Dylan, Great as always. Don’t know if you know this one, but I was incessant that I couldn’t put a folder in the dock and just have it open in a finder window when clicked. My work around, create an alias of the folder and put the alias in the dock. Not pretty, but it works and saves a step. Cheers!
If you press and hold (or right-click) on any folder in the dock, there is an option at the bottom that says "open in finder"... once you get the hang of that, you won't need the alias or the extra step!
True, but then you eliminate the ability to navigate and open files from the dock WITHOUT opening the finder... so it solves one problem but creates another... using an actual folder gives you both options... Neither way is wrong, just depends on your preferences. most of the time I just want to open something in the folder, not go to the finder itself, so I prefer the actual folder and the occasional right click, but I am glad you found a solution that works for you!
@@TheMacWhisperer Agreed! For me it’s the convenience of being able to drag and drop a file to another app and I don’t believe that’s possible unless you open in finder. I do that often enough that the alias (minus any label, you have to hover or go with muscle memory) is the option that fits. I wish there were a setting to fix a folder to “open finder”, but the alias works.