Skip to main content
Home Documents Read Me & Reference LM Readme 2.0
LM Readme 2.0

LM Readme 2.0

FilenameLM_Readme_2.0.pdf
Size0.24 MB
Subsection LM
Downloads0
Enjoying MacTrove? Anonymous downloads are free and unlimited. Create a free account to track favorites, contribute metadata corrections, and join the community chat.
Reader
LM Readme 2.0
/
Loading…
OCR / Text contents
LazyMouse 2.0 Saving your arm, one dialog at a time. Thank you for trying LazyMouse by Old Jewel Software. LazyMouse is a Preference Pane that moves your cursor to the default button whenever a dialog box appears on your screen. In other words, it will save you time moving the mouse to dismiss dialogs System Requirements: LazyMouse requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later to run. It should work on any Macintosh that will support Mac OS X 10.4. It will also require that you turn on "Access for Assistive Devices", which may require administrator access. This read me explains in full how to do this. Installation: To install LazyMouse: • double-click the LazyMouse.prefpane file. • Your System Preferences application will load right away. • A sheet may appear asking if you want to install LazyMouse just for the current user or for all users on your computer. If you aren't sure, just choose "Install for this user only" and click the "Install" button. • If you see the default list of preference panes, then look for and click the LazyMouse icon. • From now on, simply open System Preferences and click the LazyMouse icon to access Lazy- Mouse. Turning on Access for Assistive Devices: LazyMouse uses Mac OS X's accessibility routines to learn the location of the buttons in your dialogs. For this reason, you need to turn on this functionality. If you open the LazyMouse preference pane and see this message: LazyMouse cannot run if "Access for Assistive Devices" is turned off in the Universal Access Preference Pane then you need to turn on these routines. • Click the button labeled "Open the Universal Access Prefer- ence Pane". • Look at the bottom of the window, and click the checkbox la- beled "Enable access for assistive devices" • In the drawer that appeared under the preference pane, click the LazyMouse button to return to LazyMouse. Starting LazyMouse: To start LazyMouse: • Open the LazyMouse preference pane. • Select the checkbox labeled "Whenever a new window ap- pears, snap the cursor to the: Default Button" • If you want to test LazyMouse, click the button labeled "Try it Out". A dialog box will appear, and your cursor will appear di- rectly over the OK button in the dialog. Just click "OK" Using LazyMouse: To use LazyMouse, simply enjoy the fact that it moves your cursor where you want it to go. LazyMouse runs in the background and waits for a new window to appear on screen. If the new window has a default button, it moves your cursor over that button to save you a little bit of time. Stopping LazyMouse: To turn LazyMouse off: • Open the LazyMouse preference pane. • Unselect the checkbox labeled "Whenever a new window ap- pears, snap the cursor to the: Default Button". Jumping to the Cancel Button: If you would like, LazyMouse can move the cursor to the Alternate button (usual…

Showing first 3,000 characters of 14,542 total. Open the full document →

mp.ls