Mac OS Catalina New 22 Apr 2017 #5. I have the problem, that Windows 10 is really annoying when it comes to balloon tips when you are in tablet mode. Disable the Red Badge Alerts on Dock Icons in Mac OS X Apr 29, 2013 - 1 Comment The little red badges that appear on app icons stored in the Mac OS X Dock are intended to provide a quick alert and overview of some important notification pertaining to the respective app.
The Control Strip is a user interface component introduced in the 'classic' System 7 Macintosh operating system. It currently exists as part of the Touch Bar interface in macOS.
Use Apple Hardware Test to see if there is any hardware malfunction. Repair the disk by booting from the Recovery HD. Immediately after the chime hold down the Command and R keys until the Utility Menu appears. Choose Disk Utility and click on the Continue button. Bergens Tidende. Instructions on setting up your Meteor Mic in MAC OS or Windows. Windows 7 & Windows Vista 1. The first time you plug the Meteor Mic into a USB port, Windows 7 or Vista will install the universal drivers for that port. A balloon will pop up, telling you the computer has found the Meteor Mic.
History[edit]
The Control Strip was initially released in 1994 with the PowerBook 500 series of notebook computers and the PowerBook Duo 280subnotebook computers, at that point shipping with System 7.1. Later on it was made available to desktop and portable Macintosh computers, beginning with System 7.5.3.
Apple removed Control Strip in 2001 as a consequence of its move to Mac OS X. Apple initially attempted to integrate the Control Strip's features into the Dock. After this was found to be too clumsy, most of its features were again duplicated in the menu extras of 10.1.
An attempt was made at an open source reimplementation of the Control Strip for OS X, but it never received much developer traction and the last release is dated 27 October 2000.[1]
Apple revived the Control Strip as a component of its Touch Bar in October 2016. By default, the rightmost portion of the Touch Bar displays a subset of system controls previously available on the keyboard's function keys. When Control Strip is expanded the full set of system controls is displayed.[1]
Features[edit]
Somewhat like the system trays of other operating systems, the Control Strip allowed easy access to status information about and control of simple tasks such as screen resolution, AppleTalk activity, battery status etc. Each task appears as a button-like popup menu called a module, these modules are managed in the Finder as individual module files, which have their own folder in the System Folder ('Control Strip Modules') and are executed alongside the Control Strip as it starts up or can be dragged directly onto the strip while it is running.
The Control Strip always anchors itself to the closest vertical screen edge (left or right,) but can be freely moved up and down both sides of any display by the user. It defaults to the lower left corner of the primary display on fresh systems.
Users can choose whether to turn the Control Strip on and off and even set a hot key to hide and reveal it using its control panel. Two buttons at either end allow the Strip to be collapsed and expanded (with the one opposite the screen edge also allowing the strip to be resized when dragged), while two more buttons just inside those allow one to scroll through a very full Strip. Holding down the option key while clicking turns the cursor into a distinctive hand shape that allows one to drag the Strip around the screen, rearrange modules within the Strip and drag modules out.
Extensibility[edit]
Control Strip modules were also available from many third parties. For example, Conflict Catcher included a Control Strip module to switch extension sets, while DAVE used one to toggle SMB/NetBIOS networking. Some novelty modules even consisted of calculators, calendars and games. Like the System Trays of other OSs, this was often abused to insert a flotsam module that merely launched and quit a given application.
References[edit]
- ^'macOS Human Interface Guidelines: About the Touch Bar'. developer.apple.com. Retrieved 2016-10-28.
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
- Control Strip Outlet at the Wayback Machine (archive index)
- Final Update at the Wayback Machine (archived September 23, 2001)
In this tutorial we will go over step by step on How to Install Laravel with MAMP on Mac OSX.
Let's dive into the steps.
Download & Install MAMP
The first step is to make sure you have MAMP installed on your Mac.
MAMP is a free, local server environment that can be installed under macOS and Windows with just a few clicks. MAMP provides them with all the tools they need to run WordPress on their desktop PC for testing or development purposes.
Go to MAMP official website https://www.mamp.info/ and choose to download MAMP for OSX (Mac)
This will download a *.pkg
installer on your MAC. Click the package to start installing MAMP.
Click on Continue to proceed with Installation. Go through the installation with all the steps.
The package will start writing files in your MAC.
Once the installation is successfully completed, You can now go ahead to start the MAMP.
Move to your Applications directory. You should see a MAMP directory created with following contents.
Click on MAMP to start the MAMP Control Panel (Which looks like below image)
Click on Start Servers to Start the MAMP Server. If the MAMP is installed correctly and the server started without any errors, you should see the following page on accessing localhost
in your browser.
Great job on installing the MAMP server. Let's move to next step.
Download & Install Composer
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Laravel makes use of composer for dependency management, So we need to make sure we have that installed in our system.
- ^'macOS Human Interface Guidelines: About the Touch Bar'. developer.apple.com. Retrieved 2016-10-28.
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
- Control Strip Outlet at the Wayback Machine (archive index)
- Final Update at the Wayback Machine (archived September 23, 2001)
In this tutorial we will go over step by step on How to Install Laravel with MAMP on Mac OSX.
Let's dive into the steps.
Download & Install MAMP
The first step is to make sure you have MAMP installed on your Mac.
MAMP is a free, local server environment that can be installed under macOS and Windows with just a few clicks. MAMP provides them with all the tools they need to run WordPress on their desktop PC for testing or development purposes.
Go to MAMP official website https://www.mamp.info/ and choose to download MAMP for OSX (Mac)
This will download a *.pkg
installer on your MAC. Click the package to start installing MAMP.
Click on Continue to proceed with Installation. Go through the installation with all the steps.
The package will start writing files in your MAC.
Once the installation is successfully completed, You can now go ahead to start the MAMP.
Move to your Applications directory. You should see a MAMP directory created with following contents.
Click on MAMP to start the MAMP Control Panel (Which looks like below image)
Click on Start Servers to Start the MAMP Server. If the MAMP is installed correctly and the server started without any errors, you should see the following page on accessing localhost
in your browser.
Great job on installing the MAMP server. Let's move to next step.
Download & Install Composer
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Laravel makes use of composer for dependency management, So we need to make sure we have that installed in our system.
Open your terminal and type out command composer -v
, If this gives your the composer version that means you have composer already installed on your machine. If not follow below steps.
Download composer installer by this command in terminal
Move the composer to /usr/local/bin/composer
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That's it, you now have composer on your MAC. Test it out by command composer -v on terminal.
PHP version requirement
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Latest version of Laravel i.e. 5.7 requires PHP >=7.1.3 , Although the latest MAMP will have the latest PHP, it might be the case that the PHP installed local to your MAC machine is old.
Check by running the following command on terminal.
If the version returned by this command is >=7.1.3 , then you are good to go. But if not then you either have to upgrade your php version on local mac, Or we can switch local PHP to use our MAMP php version which is greater than 7.1.3
Here is how you can do it.
- Within the Terminal, run
vim ~/.bash_profile
- Type
i
and then paste the following at the top of the file:(You can check the latest PHP version available in your MAMP directory (/Applications/MAMP/bin/php)
- Hit ESC, Type :wq, and hit Enter
- In Terminal, run source ~/.bash_profile
- In Terminal, type in which php again and look for the updated string. If everything was successful, It should output the new path to MAMP PHP install
- In case it doesn't output the correct path, try closing the terminal window (exit fully) and open again, it should apply the changes (Restart in short).
Install Laravel
Alright, we are now all setup to install Laravel with MAMP.
Navigate to Applications/MAMP/htdocs
folder in terminal & run the following command
This will start downloading the Laravel software and other required dependencies.
Once the Laravel installation is finished, Now it's time to run the Laravel web application.
Navigate to the project you just created.
Run the following command.
Then it will show you the url where project is running something like http://127.0.0.1:8000, Go to the browser and hit this url. You should see the Laravel home page.
Fantastic Job Done ! You have now installed Laravel with Mamp on Mac OSX. Have fun working with Laravel.
If you are looking for more Laravel tutorial we have got you covered -> Laravel Framework Tutorials and Examples