Monday's Mac Gadget is here to help you with those cool things that we all just have to have on our Macs. If you do, register and buy the author a couple pints. Plus it's Pintware - if you don't feel like it, don't pay anything. It can be customized in every way imaginable, so if you only like one feature, you can turn all the others off. In plain english that means you have easy access to your favorite files and programs from anywhere. All menus can also include a sub-menu that lists anything you put into the special "FinderPop Items Folder". All menus can include a list of applications that are running, so you can switch to one or open a file with one from anywhere. The menu for folders can include the contents of that folder, allowing you to navigate through your hard drive with ease. FinderPop also enhances the pop-up menus in a handful of nifty ways. It works great, and is intuitive enough that your mom can use it. Your one-button mouse can access those contextual menus from anywhere just by holding down the mouse button for an amount of time you can set to your taste. If you're a power user with no budget for a new mouse, stop reading and download FinderPop now. Just remember that power users are the minority before sending flame mail to Apple. That said, I didn't last a week before I ran to the store and bought a new mouse so I could use them.
![finderpop sierra finderpop sierra](https://filesbear.com/mac/pics/1151/md5-1.jpg)
Contextual menus are for Power Users, not everyone. It's when to right-click that just eludes the unwashed masses.
Finderpop sierra how to#
I don't mean how to right-click anyone can get the hang of that. Anyone who's tried to explain the right-click to a computer neophyte will likely agree with me.
![finderpop sierra finderpop sierra](https://filesbear.com/mac/pics/1151/md5-6.jpg)
It gives people like me who bought two-button mice better contextual menus, and makes it easy for people with one-button mice to get in on the action, too.įirst, a mini-rant. But if the Mac users reading this are anything like the ones I know personally, most of us don't really use contextual menus.
![finderpop sierra finderpop sierra](https://filesbear.com/mac/pics/1151/md5-3.jpg)
I'll assume most Mac Observer readers are techno-junkies - certainly enough so that most of us have MacOS 8.0 or later. The Mac Observer Express Daily Newsletter