Showing posts with label Mac OS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mac OS. Show all posts

Sunday, June 18, 2017

How to Quickly Import Music and Movies Straight into iTunes

What do you do when you have to add some music or movies into iTunes library? Well, the answer is obvious that you’ll open iTunes and visit music list or movies list accordingly and import the music or movies which you’ve wanted to import.

Instead of doing these (opening iTunes, visiting the proper music or movies list, and drag the files) , did you know that there is a hidden folder in Mac OS X which automatically does the same thing for you.

QUICKLY IMPORT MUSIC AND MOVIES STRAIGHT INTO ITUNES

  • Within Finder, Visit go > go to folder
  • Type this location in the field: ~/Music/iTunes/iTunes Media/
Once you’ve reached that location, one of the folder you see is Automatically Add to iTunes.
Whenever you place any music or movie file inside this folder, it is automatically imported into your iTunes Library.

AUTOMATICALLY IMPORT DOWNLOADED MUSIC & MOVIES TO ITUNES

If you use any software to download music or movies, make its default download location to that folder. That means the downloaded music or movie will be automatically imported to your iTunes library.
Tip: You can make a shortcut of that file in your desktop. So whenever you like to add any music or movie, you can simply drag it into it.

Thursday, May 25, 2017

7 Most Useful Quick Mac OS X Yosemite Tips

Mac OS X Yosemite is one of the best OS X Apple has ever introduced. With tons of improvements over OS X Mavericks and some UI changes has added extra flavour to user experience.
Here are 7 most useful quick tips for you to get most out of your Mac running OS X Yosemite.

TIP 1: QUICKLY TURN OFF NOTIFICATIONS

Suppose you’re working on some stuffs and you really need focus and do not want to get disturbed by notifications that show up in the top-right corner of your Mac OS X, then here’s a small workaround.
You can either disable notifications from a specific app or you can also go for “do not disturb” mode which will temporarily disable notifications to show up for rest of the day.
Turn Off Notifications From Specific App in Mac OS X
  • Visit System Preferences
  • Click on Notification
  • On the left, select the application from which you do not want to receive any notifications
  • Now click on None as the alert style for that specific app
Quickly Turn Off Notifications in Mac OS X
Using Do Not Disturb to disable notification for rest of the day.
  • From Menu bar, click on Notification Center icon
  • Scroll down a bit
  • Turn on Do Not Disturb
You can also use a shortcut to directly turn on Do Not Disturb mode in Mac OS X. Just hold alt key and click the Notification Center icon. The icon turns dim when notifications alert are disabled.

TIP 2: QUICKLY RELAUNCH FINDER

For starters, Finder in Mac OS X is just like My Computer in Windows. Finder makes it easy to access folders like Applications, Documents, Downloads, Movies, Music  Pictures, etc.
But within a period of time, Finder sometimes might become unresponsive due to various reasons. In that case you might need to know the ways to quickly relaunch the frozen finder.
There are two ways you can relaunch the Finder in your Mac.
Using Dock
  • Hold down option key and right click on the Finder icon in the Dock
  • Now select Relaunch
Using Shortcut Key
  • Hold down option+command+esc keys together to open Force Quit Applications window
  • Select Finder from the list of Applications
  • Click Force Quit
Now you can easily relaunch the freezed Finder in your Mac.

TIP 3: CHANGE YOUR LOGIN ACCOUNT PROFILE PICTURE

The very first thing you do after owning a Mac is personalizing it, making the system more like yourself and set the system preferences according to your needs. And when it comes to personalizing needs, setting a login account profile picture is one of them.
Changing Your login account profile picture in Mac OS X
  • From Menu Bar, Visit Apple Logo > System Preferences
  • Click Users & Groups icon
  • While you’re under Password tab, hover your mouse pointer over the present login account profile picture to get an edit option and click on it
  • Now choose your image which you want to set as profile picture from the list of available places (Defaults, Recents, iCloud Photos, Faces, camera, Linked)
If you want to use a custom/downloaded photo as your profile picture, you’d have to drag the particular photo over the current profile picture. Scale the photo (zoom in/out) as per your need and finally click Done.

TIP 4: GENERATE STRONG & MEMORABLE PASSWORDS

Getting yourself a strong yet memorable password is a difficult task. No one really wants to compromise their accounts (eg, social networks, e-banking, etc) because of weak passwords. Passwords must never contain any information related to you and your lifestyle. Hackers might use the information related to you for brute-force attacks, and your accounts might get into wrong hands.
If you’re a Mac user, then there’s a way to generate a super strong as well as memorable passwords using Keychain Access, an application which handles all the password and certificate security in.
Make Mac OS X Generate Strong & Memorable Passwords
  • Open Keychain Access Application (Finder > Applications > Utilities)
  • From Menu Bar, Click on File and select New Password Item
  • In next window, click on the key icon present beside Password field
  • A small window pops up, and there’s the auto generated password in the Suggestion field
  • To generate next password just select Memorable from the drop down menu
The length of auto generated password can be adjusted by sliding the Length slider menu.

TIP 5: CHECK VERSION OF APPS

It might be for checking the availability of newer versions or downgrading to older versions; whatever may be the reasons sometimes you might need to be aware of the version of app you’re currently running in your Mac. And there are two quick ways to know which version of application/software you’re using.
Knowing Which Version of App You’re Using in Mac
  • Open Finder
  • Go to Applications folder
  • Single click the App whose version you want to know
  • Press command + I
  • Under General, you’ll get the Version of that specific app
And the next way is to open the application, and from the menu bar visit application’s menu > About.

TIP 6: INCREASE/DECREASE APP WINDOW RESIZE AREA

Mac users can resize the App/Software window by moving the cursor to the edges of an active window and finally click & drag; outside and inside so as to increase or decrease the window size respectively.
For some users moving the cursor to the exact edge can be difficult. But there’s a small workaround that increases the window resizing area, which makes it easy to resize app/software window quickly in Mac OS X.
Increasing/Decreasing App Window Resize Area in Mac
  • Open Terminal (press command + SPACE, and type terminal)
  • Enter the following command which changes the edge resize size to the value you set.
defaults write -g AppleEdgeResizeExteriorSize 15
Change the value 15 to some other number as per your need.
  • Restart Your Mac
In case you want to revert back to default setting, enter the following command into the Terminal and restart your Mac.
defaults delete -g AppleEdgeResizeExteriorSize

TIP 7: CHANGE FINDER SIDEBAR ICON SIZE

Finder sidebar helps Mac user to quickly access their Favourites Locations (iCloud Drive, Airdrop, Applications, Documents, Movies, Music, Pictures, etc), Devices (flash drives), Tags, Network, etc. By-default Mac system shows medium sized icons in the sidebar. Some users might want to decrease or increase the icon size.
Changing Finder Sidebar Icon Size in Mac
  • Visit System Preferences (Either for the dock, or Apple Logo > System Preferences…)
  • Open General
  • Next to Sidebar icon size heading, use the drop down menu to select the icon size (Small, Medium, Large)
Changes takes place immediately. Now open Finder window, you’ll notice that the icon size have changed according to the size you’ve selected.

CONCLUSION

I hope you found these Mac OS X Yosemite Tips helpful. These tips also work for OS X El Capitan, I have personally tested it on this new OS X too.
Stay subscribed to our blog for further updates.

Thursday, May 4, 2017

How to View Complete Details About a WiFi Network in Mac OS

Whenever you’re connected to a Wireless network (WiFi) on your Mac OS X, you don’t get to see the complete details about that specific WiFi network. You can manage various WiFi settings by visiting Network preferences > WiFi > Advanced. While you can view very few details like your local IP address provided by the router, subnet mask, router’s IP address, setup DNS and proxies; from the Advanced settings window.
But there is a quick way, to view complete details about a WiFi network which includes BSSID, channel & country code of the router, signal strength, disturbance (noise), and the transfer rate of the network.

VIEW COMPLETE DETAILS ABOUT A WIFI NETWORK IN MAC

Make sure you’re connected to the WiFi network whose details you wish to view.
Now hold down option key and click on the WiFi icon on the menu bar. This time you’ll not only see the options to search and switch between the networks, you’ll also see a list of various technical details about the WiFi you’re connected to.
From the top are the interface name and the mac address of the WiFi adapter of your Mac system. The next extra option you get this time is Open Wireless Diagnostics. Without having to visit the advanced setting window you can directly diagnose WiFi problems, using this option.
BSSID is the mac address of the wireless access point (WAP).
RSSI is the strength of the signal of the Wireless network you’re connected to. RSSI stands for Received Signal Strength Indication, whose value ranges from -100 to 0. For a signal to have good strength, its value must be near to 0. That means, RSSI indication of -20dBm is better than -70dBm.
Tx Rate is the maximum speed of the network which is possible for data transfer inside that specific network.
PHY Mode shows which wireless technology standard does the network follow for the connection. Mostly, nowadays’s routers make use of 802.11n technology, but it might vary depending upon the router you’re using.

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