Unanswered Mysteries Mac OS

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Explore the Book Store

Search for and purchase books from a variety of categories and genres from the Book Store.

If you're planning on running the treasures of the past you'll find here on real old Macintosh hardware from the 90's, you sir/madame, deserve to win an Internet! For others, there's SheepShaver, a PowerPC emulator capable of running Mac OS 9.0.4 down to Mac OS 7.5.2 and there's Basilisk II, a 68k emulator, capable of running Mac OS (8.1 to 7.0). Why Apple doesn't source their cobalt and mithril from dwarvish mines is a real mystery. This survey only tells us about people who chose not to upgrade and their biggest reasons for doing so. Unsolved Mysteries is an American mystery documentary television show that began with a series of television specials, airing on NBC from 1987 to 1988. The program was picked up in 1988 and aired a total of nine seasons during its run on the network. The series was then acquired by CBS in 1997, where it continued for a short run of 2 seasons. In 2001, Lifetime acquired the series where it. In the sidebar, click Top Charts, The New York Times, or Top Authors to browse for books. Or click Categories to see genres like Comics & Graphic Novels, History, or Mysteries & Thrillers. You can also use the Search option in the upper-right corner. Then you can click Get Sample to read a preview of the book before buying. The sixteenth release of Apple's desktop operating system for Macintosh computers. Use this tag only if your question relates to using macOS Big Sur specific behavior. More Bountied 0; Unanswered Frequent Votes. I have a project on Mac OS that uses sheets quite a bit to present data however setting.

Browse books on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch

  1. Open the Books app and tap Book Store at the bottom of the screen.
  2. Browse the top charts or books recommended for you. Or tap Browse Sections to see book store sections like Coming Soon or genres like Young Adult or Nonfiction. You can also tap the Search tab to search for specific titles, authors, narrators, and more.
  3. Tap a book. You can tap Sample to read a preview of the book, or tap Want to Read to add it to your Want to Read list in the Reading Now tab.

You can tap Buy and confirm the purchase of your book. All of your books, book series, PDFs, and audiobooks that you've purchased from the Book Store or Audiobook Store or manually added to your device appear under the Library tab.

Browse books on your Mac

  1. Open the Books app and click Book Store at the top of the window.
  2. In the sidebar, click Top Charts, The New York Times, or Top Authors to browse for books. Or click Categories to see genres like Comics & Graphic Novels, History, or Mysteries & Thrillers. You can also use the Search option in the upper-right corner.
  3. Click a book. Then you can click Get Sample to read a preview of the book before buying.

You can click Buy and confirm the purchase of your book. All of your books, book series, PDFs, and audiobooks that you've purchased from the Book Store or Audiobook Store or manually added to your Mac appear in your Library tab under the All Books tab in the sidebar .

Read books

Tap or double-click a book to open it and start reading. If you close the book, Apple Books saves your place for you. Controls are available to customize your reading experience and annotate passages. You can also search for a specific word or page number and create bookmarks to view later.

Control your reading on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch

Tap the center of your screen on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch to open and close the controls while reading. You can tap the Table of Contents button to skip to a different chapter or section, see bookmarks you've added, and view highlights and notes you've made.

Learn how to adjust font sizes and brightness, take notes, and create bookmarks.

Control your reading on your Mac

To view the controls when you're reading on your Mac, move your pointer to the top of the book. You can click the Table of Contents button to skip to a different chapter or section. To skip to a bookmarked page, click the the down arrow next to the Bookmark button .

Learn how to highlight and take notes or change a book's appearance.

Manage your library

Organize the books in your library, and download a book to read offline. If you need to remove any downloaded items, you can delete books and audiobooks from your devices.

Download books on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch

  1. Find the item in your library. Don't see the book that you want?
  2. Tap the book to open it and download it automatically. You can also tap the More button below the book and choose Download.
  3. If the book is part of a series, first tap to open the series, then tap the download button under the book that you want.

Organize your library on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch

  1. Tap Library.
  2. Under Collections, tap the word next to Sort. If you don't see Sort, swipe down on your screen to have the option appear.
  3. From the menu that appears, choose Recent, Title, Author, or Manually. You can also sort other collections. For example, go to Collections > Audiobooks to sort your audiobooks by author.

Click the List View button to view your books as a list instead of a grid.

Download books on your Mac

  1. Find the item in your library. Don't see the book that you want?
  2. Click the cloud icon in the upper-right corner. If you don't see the cloud icon, the book is already downloaded to your device.
  3. If the book is part of a series, first double-click to open the series, then click the cloud icon on the book that you want to download.

Organize your library on your Mac

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  1. Click All Books in the left sidebar.
  2. Click Sort By in the upper-right corner.
  3. Choose Most Recent, Title, or Sort Manually.

Click the List View button to view your books as a list instead of a grid.

If you don't see a book

If you don't see a book that you purchased from the Book Store in your library, here are some things you can try.

Update your device

Make sure that you're using the latest version of iOS or iPadOS on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, or the latest version of macOS on your Mac.

Turn on iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch

  1. Open the Settings app.
  2. Tap [your name] > iCloud
  3. Turn on both iCloud Drive and Books.
  4. Then go to Settings > Books. Under Syncing, turn on iCloud Drive.

Download all of your books on your Mac

  1. Click the Book Store tab at the top of the window.
  2. In the sidebar, click Featured.
  3. Under Quick Links, click Purchased.
  4. Click the Download All button in the lower-right corner.

Redownload or unhide your books

Redownload books to add books that you previously deleted back to your library.

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Unhide books if you previously hid those purchases.

Discover more ways to read

  • You can listen to audiobooks in the Books app on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Mac. Or use iTunes on a PC.
  • Read storybooks aloud with iBooks Storytime on Apple TV.
  • You can save copies of PDFs from emails and webpages into the Books app.
  • You can also add DRM-free EPUB file format books, iBooks Author books, books that you create with Pages, MP3 audiobooks, AAC audiobooks, and Audible.com audiobooks to your library.

Did you know that you can imply any crazy ol' thing if you just phrase it as a question? Let's look at an example.

Is Craig Federighi a never nude?

See? The Macalope didn't say Craig was a never nude, but now all you can picture is Craig showering in jorts. And we don't even know if he does that! Yet! But it's a thing that people are speculating about. There's talk of it. Now, anyway.

Writing for Newsweek, Jason Murdock is doing that fancy two-step that's sweeping the nation called 'Just askin'!'

'Did the iPhone X fail? New study reveals why users refused to upgrade.' (Tip o' the antlers to Daniel.)

The users! They refused to upgrade. And the phone—did it fail? Did it?

Wait, is Murdock asking us? Then, no! It did not!

Potential iPhone buyers want larger screens with lower prices and are refusing to upgrade because previous models work just fine, a new survey says.

Reading this lede to understand the survey results is a bit like watching people play foosball to learn the rules of soccer. Those were the top reasons cited by people but separately, so stringing them together like that is somewhat misleading.

Murdock does at least call the 'reports' of a 50 percent cut in iPhone X part orders what they are, rumors.

It revealed that roughly 40 percent of users had not upgraded to the iPhone X.

That's how the Macalope had read it at first based on Piper Jaffray's somewhat confusing wording:

Our survey of 1,500 iPhone users shows that ~40% have not upgraded to iPhone X because they either feel the device is too expensive (31%) or they prefer a larger screen (8%)…

However, Piper Jaffray only surveyed people who had chosen not to upgrade to the iPhone X. The roughly 40 percent noted above is the sum of the 31 percent and the 8 percent. The Macalope isn't sure why Piper Jaffray chose to highlight the sum of those two numbers rather than the 44 percent of people who said they didn't upgrade because their existing iPhones were working just fine. Most likely it was to highlight the fact that Apple was expected to alleviate both of those problems with new iPhones rumored to be introduced this year. But no good news for Apple goes unpunished.

Just look at the missed implication of what Murdock says. Even though it's not what the survey actually said, imagine reading 'only 40 percent chose to upgrade' and thinking 'Oh! Bad news for Apple!' when that would have meant a whopping 60 percent of people had upgraded to a $999 phone. That would have been bananasly good for Apple. Like brandy-and-brown-sugar-soaked flaming kind of bananasly good.

Despite the lacklustre reception to its latest models…

Objection, your honor. Assumes facts not in evidence.

The company was recently forced to admit to slowing down older smartphone models…

Instead of having them shut down, yes. 'Sorry, we made your phone not do something bad.' Despite this, more people cited their existing iPhones being just fine than any other reason for not upgrading to the iPhone X.

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…and has faced increasing concerns over child labor.

Other smartphone, electric car and other device manufacturers get cobalt for the batteries in their products from mines staffed by happy, singing dwarves. True fact. Why Apple doesn't source their cobalt and mithril from dwarvish mines is a real mystery.

This survey only tells us about people who chose not to upgrade and their biggest reasons for doing so. It says nothing about the success of the iPhone X because it says nothing about the split between those who did upgrade and those who didn't.

Unanswered Mysteries Mac Os X

Castle of dr. brain mac os. But, then, Newsweek was just askin'.





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