Mac OS X Bible, Panther Edition

You received an introduction to Mac OS X, the Finder, documents, the Dock, Expos , and the desktop in Chapters 2 and 3. Now you’re going to find out how to customize all the elements of the Mac OS X environment to suit your tastes and to improve your enjoyment and productivity. In this Chapter, you learn how to customize the overall appearance of the environment, and how to change the toolbar in Finder windows. You learn how to set View Options that affect the look of each Finder window and how to change the picture on the desktop. You also learn about screen savers, and how to change their options to suit your needs. You also explore ways to get the most from Expos and the Dock.

In addition, this Chapter describes techniques for working with aliases and labels. These techniques include applying labels and modifying label titles. You learn how to make aliases work for you- how to create them, change them, fix them if they break, and more.

The Desktop

The desktop, as you know, is the large expanse of color that comprises the background of your Mac OS environment. By default, this area has a swirling blue color, ostensibly to soothe your jangled nerves as you slave away at your computer. Of course, blue is a relaxing color, but it can be boring. You may want to change the color to black, red, or your favorite color. Or you may want to place a picture of your cat or your motorcycle as a desktop picture. To do so, you must delve into the System Preferences.

Desktop background customization

You can cover the Desktop with a solid color or a picture by choosing an image file as follows:

  1. Click the System Preferences icon in the Dock (or System Preferences menu item in the Apple menu). The System Preferences window appears, showing buttons for different types of settings.

  2. In System Preferences, click the Desktop & Screen Saver button or choose View Desktop & Screen Saver. The System Preferences window changes to show one of the two panes in this preference panel. The settings for changing the desktop background are of course under the Desktop pane. Click on the Desktop button if it isn’t already selected (top left) to reveal the Desktop pane. Divided into two distinct frames, the left side contains a list of options, while the right side is populated dynamically according to which list item you select on the left. The Desktop pane is shown in Figure 4-1.

    Figure 4-1: Set the Desktop background in the Desktop & Screen Saver pane of System Preferences.

  3. Select either a color or a picture for your background.

  4. Close the window with the red Close button to complete setting the preference. Alternately, you can select Quit System Preferences from the System Preferences menu.

When choosing a background, you have a number of preinstalled options available to pick from. You can set your background as a solid color, or as one of many attractive pictures or patterns.

Tip

If you check the Change Picture checkbox, the operating system will cycle through pictures at the specified rate. To choose the change rate, select from the pull-down menu of time options. At the specified interval, your desktop image will change. The change picture option will use images from the same folder as your initially chosen image. Checking the Random button causes the system to randomly display your choices from the folder instead of displaying them in alphabetical order. The time interval options range from five seconds to every day, with additional options for changing at each login or after waking from sleep.

Категории