Nov 14

So Stacks are cool, and they show you what’s in the folder, but only the last added item (for Downloads) or based on your sort preference for others.

So what about a cool icon, and also a nice stack of the contents? You got it! Whatever you have at the front should be dated a long way into the future to ensure it stays at the front. To do this you can use a utility like FileBuddy, A Better Finder Attributes or some such.

Or if you know how, use the ‘touch’ command in the terminal. Or if not, type “man touch” to find out how. Want some cool icons to have at the front? Well, start here with some great transparent folder icons provided by a Japanese blogger. They even come pre-dated a long way into the future. Enjoy!

written by WhizzKid \\ tags: ,

Nov 12

I can’t take complete credit for this–some of the information in this tip is thanks to “A New Mac Tip a Day. However, the icons used and the method for getting them is unique to this tip.

I have personally always liked a “uniform” look to the old contextual folders I used to keep in the right hand side of my dock in Tiger. As long as each folder is identifiable, it gives the dock a cleaner look–especially when you compare it to the current “stacks” mentality of Leopard.

To complete this trick, you need to understand the concept that whatever item is sorted at the top of a stack will act as the displaying icon of that stack in the dock–a fact that is obviously annoying and counter-intuitive. This tip will use that to our advantage, though!

1) Let’s begin by choosing one stack icon to change. Let’s go with “Applications” for now. If you open your main HD directory, the applications folder has the nice clean blue “applications” folder. Right click on that folder and choose “get info.” The familiar info pane pops up for our Applications folder.

2) In the info pane, go up to the top to click and highlight the Application folder icon. Copy it.

3) Now create a new folder on your desktop.

4) Right-click on this newly created folder, bringing up the info pane once again. This time, go up to the top of the pane, click once on the icon to highlight it, and PASTE the Application icon you copied in step 2.

5) Now you have a folder with an “Application” folder look to it on your desktop. Here’s where the fun part comes in: Rename the folder to “0Applications_Label” — or something similar, as long as the number “0″ is the firs character in the name.

6) Drag this newly renamed folder into your Application folder or Stack (either way is fine, as long as it’s in there!).

7) Right click on the Applications stack in your dock, and make sure to sort the contents by “name.”

And that’s it! Now you have a nice new “Applications folder” in your dock, and no matter what the contents are, you will always see the Application folder icon there.

Repeat these steps for any stacks you keep in the right hand side of the dock. I did it for 3 other folders: My “Home” folder, my “Downloads” folder, and a personal “To Be Sorted” folder I use daily. In each case, I made a new folder, added identifiable icons, renamed each (”0Downloads_Label,” etc.), and put them in their respective stacks. The result is below:

dockminvi1.jpg

magnified:
dockmagig1.jpg

So far, the only drawback is that you can still see some “lower leve” stacking of icons within each stack, but that’s ok. It looks better, and works better!

The only thing missing is contextual browsing! ;)

written by rockmsockm \\ tags: ,

Nov 04

I found this trick in Leopard to be very handy. When you click once on a Stacks folder in your Dock, you can then click and drag any file on the viewable list into the trash can or anywhere on the desktop or open Finder window. I find this to be very cool with the Downloads folder in particular, I can now immediately put into the trash those installers I download and no longer need after the installation.

written by MacMike \\ tags:

Nov 01

Here’s a nifty trick for stacking your mounted volumes. This means external disk drives, thumb drives, inserted CD/DVD’s, anything that becomes a disk or disk image mounted in Finder.

In Finder, type “Apple-Shift-G” it will prompt you for a location, type “/Volumes” and hit go. Finder will display the /Volumes folder. From here you will notice the top of the window, right in the centre, has a Folder icon with “Volumes” written next to it. Drag this small folder icon into your dock to create a stack of your Volumes!

stackvols1.pngstackvols2.pngstackvols3.png

Note that unlike other files and folders in Stacks, you cannot drag a mounted volume to the trash to eject it!

written by James \\ tags:

Oct 31

By now you’ve fiddled with the new “stacks” feature in your dock. It’s just so cool.

Did you know you can navigate a stack while it’s open with the arrow keys? You can even find a file in a stack by starting to type it’s filename.

Watch as the file changes colour as you navigate or type

stacksnav.png

written by James