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I don't have ACS installed so I can't answer that. However adding to the New-> menu can be done through the registry (lots of guides on the web) by the user so I guess if Adobe's installer sets it up then yes.
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OS X come with these wonderful integrated utilities called AppleScript and Automater. That can be built pretty quickly using them. And yes, when the kids are to bed tonight I might go ahead and do just that. |
I figured there had to be a way - should be that way out of the box IMO. I'm sure there are many Apple converts who miss that sort of functionality from their crappy PC days ;)
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From MacWorld....
New documents wherever you are The standard way of creating a new document in a specific folder is clumsy: you open the app, create a new document, select Save, and then navigate to the folder where you want to store the doc. But when I want to create a new document, the folder I want to store it in is usually already open in the Finder. So I use Document Palette (New document here | Utilities | Mac Gems | Macworld). With Document Palette running, I can just press a keyboard shortcut, and a list of document types appears on the screen; I choose one, and a new document of that type is created in the current Finder folder. You can customize the list of document types that appear, and you can include document templates. (For people who prefer a more Windows-like approach, NuFile (Right click = new file | Utilities | Mac Gems | Macworld) lets you create new documents by right-clicking inside a Finder window.)—Dan Frakes |
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I have been using OSX at home for about 2.5 years now and never knew about quick look. I always thought browsing through a folder of photos was a pain and preview sucks because you can't move from file to file. |
NuFile is out if date. Developer abandoned it couple of years ago. Not even Leopard compatible.
With quicklook I navigate files and directories using the arrow keys, holding shift while using arrows selects multiple. |
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Took a few minutes before I bugged out of the office and created a contextual for a basic text file which any .nix can create. It should work the same way for things like PDFs since CUPS is part of OS X and it can create PDFs Rolled one for Word and it sort if worked, what it did was to launch word with a new doc so if I can get it to accept the selected folder as the default save that should accomplish the same thing in a roundabout way. |
Wow, great information in this thread. Thank you for responding to my rant with useful info.
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I'll send you the contextual drop ins when I get them done
Sitting out back with the wife, some wine and the outdoor fireplace going so may not finish tonight |
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Listen, I've had this MacBook Pro for 13 months now, and I'm not looking back- this machine is NIGHT AND DAY better than the stupid [!] Windows-based PC's. The exorbitant price of the Apple product more than makes up for how much better the computer works! But iPhoto SUCKS! And Snow Leopard doesn't make it easy to simply create a file, and then sub-files, which is how I organized my photo files on my previous Sony Vaio. My laptop is my tool for touring the internet, cataloging my files, and doing work with my company. While I have a backup, I run my life around this machine. I DON'T need it to be a puzzle too- N! PS: This last was a pointed criticism to the folks at Apple in Cupertino. |
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Kill iPhoto. Just trash it and use the method above. |
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In Mac, ctrl-click = right-click, and it brings up a context window with new folder creation.
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Anywho, I have contextual scripts for Create New Text File, Create New Word File and Create New Excel File. The Word and Excel work a little different. It will launch Word/Excel if not currently running and create a new blank doc then save to selected folder so the end result is the same, right click to create a new file in the selected folder and not have to deal with navigating to a save location. Send me a PM if you want/need them. Scott |
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I use iPhoto a lot, and find it fairly useful, especially the built in facial recognition in the new version. What iPhoto does for me is store photos and delete the originals from the camera's memory. It's basically two clicks. I do commercial photo sessions a couple times a month on average, and I appreciate iPhoto's lightbox features. When I started using iPhoto, the PC alternatives still required you to have a camera-specific driver in place to deal with file transfers. All seemed to be built in to OSX. Iphoto was also able to support RAW format before the alternatives. If I were starting out now, I'm not sure Mac/iPhoto is the best solution for managing photography. My hard core photo bug friends prefer Aperture. |
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iPhoto is actually really simple to browse in the Finder. Meaning not launching the application. Mac apps are packages, inside the package are the resources that the app uses. First thing I recommend is always run in column view. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1298147786.jpg In the left hand side bar you should have an icon for "Pictures", click it, you should see an Icon for iPhoto Library, right click it and one of the contextual options will be "Show Package Contents". http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1298148006.jpg Once you open it go to the Originals folder and all your pictures are laid out in hierarchal order. I would not add to or other wise manipulate the contents of the package, you don't want to confuse the DB that manages the library but copying items out of it is a none issue. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1298148303.jpg In terms of making nested folders it's stupidly simple. Again recommend column view, 1) right click select new folder, 2) name it, keep it selected, 3) right click in next column, go back to step 1 |
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