Scroll Endurance Mouse Mac Os El Capitan

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One way to see more of what’s in a Mountain Lion window or pane is to scroll through it. Scroll bars appear at the bottom and right sides of any window or pane that contains more stuff — icons, text, pixels, or whatever — than you can see in the window.

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The following figure shows two instances of the same window: Dragging the scroll bar on the right side of the front window reveals the items above DVD Player and FaceTime and below iDVD and Image Capture, which you see in the expanded window in the background. Dragging the scroll bar on the bottom of the window reveals items to the left and right, such as Dictionary, iChat, GarageBand, and iPhoto.

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I just put in a new SSD and want to do a fresh OSX install. I believe that El Capitan is the last supported software for this hardware. I'm looking for an OS X El capitan.app download but I can't seem to find it anywhere. I managed to find an OSX El Capitan.dmg file, but that doesn't seem to work with the createinstallmedia tool. Jan 24, 2018  DMG, then convert El Capitan.DMG to El Capitan.ISO (available solutions in both Mac OS X and Windows). First way, users can obviously download El Capitan OS X 10.11 App from Apple store, then locate where to get the InstallESD.DMG from the installer in.

Simply click and drag a scroll bar to move it up or down or side to side.

If your scroll bars don’t look exactly like the ones in the figure or work as described in the following list, don’t worry. These are System Preferences you can configure to your heart’s desire.

Scroll

Here are some ways you can scroll in a window:

  • Click a scroll bar and drag. The content of the window scrolls proportionally to how far you drag the scroll bar.

  • Click in the scroll bar area but don’t click the scroll bar itself. The window scrolls either one page up (if you click above the scroll bar) or down (if you click below the scroll bar). You can change a setting in your General System Preferences pane to cause the window to scroll proportionally to where you click.

    For what it’s worth, the Page Up and Page Down keys on your keyboard function the same way as clicking the grayish scroll bar area (the vertical scroll bar only) in the Finder and many applications. But these keys don’t work in every program; don’t become too dependent on them.

    Also, if you’ve purchased a mouse, trackball, or other pointing device that has a scroll wheel, you can scroll vertically in the active (front) window with the scroll wheel or press and hold the Shift key to scroll horizontally. Alas, this horizontal scrolling-with-the-Shift-key works in Finder windows, but not in all applications. For example, it works in Apple’s TextEdit application, but not in Microsoft Word.

  • Use the keyboard. In the Finder, first click an icon in the window and then use the arrow keys to move up, down, left, or right. Using an arrow key selects the next icon in the direction it indicates — and automatically scrolls the window, if necessary. In other programs, you might or might not be able to use the keyboard to scroll.

  • Two-finger swipe (on a trackpad): If you have a notebook with a trackpad or use a Magic Trackpad or Magic Mouse, just swipe the pad with two fingers to scroll in a window.

If you use a notebook Mac — a MacBook, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro — or a desktop Mac with a Magic Trackpad, you’ll have an additional System Preferences pane in OS X El Capitan called Trackpad. This pane lets you configure tracking and clicking speed as well as the gesturing behavior of your Mac’s built-in trackpad.

If you’re looking for a replacement for your mouse, consider Apple’s $69 Magic Trackpad. This nifty wireless device can be used with any Mac or PC that has Bluetooth. It’s also the biggest glass Multi-Touch trackpad yet, nearly 80 percent larger than the MacBook Pro built-in trackpad. Yes, you can use the Magic Trackpad with your MacBook Pro, and yes, that does mean you have dual trackpads.

The Trackpad System Preference pane has three tabs — Point & Click, Scroll & Zoom, and More Gestures — as shown here.

The Trackpad System Preference pane offers controls for one-finger and multi-finger gestures.
Mac

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If you have an older notebook with the older-style trackpad, you may not see all the controls shown.

All three tabs work the same way as the Point & Click tab shown. To enable or disable a feature, click its check box. To see how a feature works, just move your cursor over it (you don’t even have to click), and a movie demonstrates that gesture on the right side of the window. In the figure, the Secondary Click feature on the left is pointed out; how it works is demonstrated in the movie playing on the right. Pretty cool, don’t you think?

You need to know a couple of other things about the Trackpad System Preference pane before you move on:

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  • If you see a little v to the right of a feature’s description (Click with Two Fingers), a drop-down menu is available; click near the v to display the options for that feature.

  • The Tracking Speed slider lets you change the relationship between finger movement on the trackpad and cursor movement onscreen. A faster tracking-speed setting (moving the slider to the right) sends your cursor flying across the screen with a mere flick of the finger; slower tracking-speed settings (moving the slider to the left) make the cursor crawl across in seemingly slow motion, even when your finger is flying. Set this setting as fast as you can stand it. Try it: You might like it.