Chapter 6

A Nerd’s Guide to System Preferences

In This Chapter

arrow Navigating System Preferences

arrow Searching for specific controls

arrow Customizing Mavericks from System Preferences

Remember the old TV series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea? You always knew you were on the bridge of the submarine Seaview because it had an entire wall made up of randomly blinking lights, crewmen darting about with clipboards, and all sorts of strange and exotic-looking controls on every available surface. You could fix just about anything by looking into the camera with grim determination and barking out an order. After all, you were On The Bridge. That’s why virtually all the dialogue and action inside the sub took place on that one (expensive) set: It was the nerve center of the ship and a truly happenin’ place to be.

I devote this entire chapter to the System Preferences window and all the settings within it. After all, if you want to change how Mavericks works or customize the features within our favorite operating system, this one window is the nerve center of OS X and a truly happenin’ place to be. (Sorry, no built-in wall of randomly blinking lights, but there are exotic controls just about everywhere.)

A Not-So-Confusing Introduction

The System Preferences window (as shown in Figure 6-1) is a self-contained beast, and you can reach it in a number of ways:

  • Click the Apple menu (9781118862377-app.tif) and choose the System Preferences menu item.
  • Click the System Preferences icon on the Dock.
  • Click most of the Finder menu status icons and then choose the Open Preferences menu item. (This trick works with the Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Display, Input Source, Time Machine, Modem, and Clock icons.)
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Figure 6-1: The powerhouse of settings and switches: System Preferences.

When the System Preferences window is open, you can click any of the group icons to switch to that group’s pane, and the entire window morphs to display the settings for the selected pane. For example, Figure 6-2 illustrates the Sound pane, where you can set a system alert sound, configure your iMac’s built-in microphone, and choose from among several output options.

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Figure 6-2: The Sound pane, proudly showing off the Sound Effects panel.

Many panes also include tabbed buttons at the top. For example, the Sound pane sports Sound Effects, Output, and Input tabs. You can click these tabs to switch to another pane within the same pane. Many panes within System Preferences have multiple subpanes. This design allows our friends at Apple to group a large number of related settings in the same pane (without things getting too confusing).

To return to the top-level System Preferences window from any pane, just click the Show All button (top left) or press maccmd.eps+L. You can also click the familiar Previous and Next buttons to move backward through the panes you’ve already visited and then move forward again, in sequence. (Yep, these buttons work just like the browser controls in Safari. Sometimes life is funny that way.)

remember.eps If a System Preference pane is locked, you can’t modify any of the settings on that pane unless you unlock the pane. If that’s the case, click the padlock icon (lower left) and, if prompted, type your admin-level account password to unlock the pane. After you finish your tweaking, you can protect the settings from inadvertent changes by clicking the padlock icon again to close the pane.

Your changes to the settings in a pane are automatically saved when you click Show All or when you click the Close button on the System Preferences window. You can also press maccmd.eps+Q to exit System Preferences and save all your changes automatically … a favorite shortcut of mine.

remember.eps If you see an Apply button in a pane, you can click it to immediately apply any changes you make, without exiting the pane. This is perfect for some settings that you might want to try first before you accept them, like many of the controls on the Network pane. However, if you’re sure about what you changed and how those changes will affect your system, you don’t have to click Apply. Just exit the System Preferences window or click Show All as you normally would, and your tweaks are accepted.

Searching for Settings

Hey, wouldn’t it be great if you could search through all the different panes in System Preferences — with all those countless radio buttons, check boxes, and slider controls — from one place? Even when you’re not quite sure exactly what it is you’re looking for?

Figure 6-3 illustrates exactly that kind of activity taking place. Just click in the System Preferences Spotlight Search box (upper right, with the magnifying glass icon) and type in just about anything. For example, if you know part of the name of a particular setting you need to change, type that. Mavericks highlights the System Preferences panes that might contain matching settings. And if you’re a Switcher from the Windows world, you can even type in what you might have called the same setting in Windows!

The System Preferences window dims, and the group icons that might contain what you’re looking for stay highlighted. Slick.

If you need to reset the Search box to try again, click the X icon that appears at the right side of the box to clear it.

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Figure 6-3: Searching for specific settings is a breeze with the Search box.

Popular Preference Panes Explained

Time to get down to brass tacks. Open the most-often-used panes in System Preferences to see what magic you can perform! I don’t discuss all the panes because I cover many of them in other chapters. (In fact, you might never need to open some System Preferences panes at all, such as Language & Text.) However, this chapter covers just about all the settings that you’re likely to use on a regular basis.

The Displays pane

If you’re a heavy-duty game player or you work with applications like video editing and 3-D modeling, you probably find yourself switching the characteristics of your monitor on a regular basis. To easily accomplish switching, visit the Displays pane (see Figure 6-4), which includes two panes:

  • Display: To allow Mavericks to choose the best resolution for your display, select the Best for Display radio button. To manually select a resolution, select the Scaled radio button and then choose the resolution that you want to use from the Resolutions list on the left. (In most cases, you want to use the highest resolution.) If you have an external monitor connected to your iMac, click the Detect Displays button that appears to scan for that monitor. Drag the Brightness slider to manually change the brightness level of your display, or select the Automatically Adjust Brightness check box to allow Mavericks to dim or brighten your display as necessary.

    tip.eps Select the Show Mirroring Options in the Menu Bar When Available check box if you’ll be using multiple monitors or a projector with your iMac. If you’re using multiple monitors, each display has a dedicated Finder menu bar, and the Dock appears on whichever display you’re using!

    tip.eps Ready to stream content to your TV directly from your iMac — without cables? You can use the wireless AirPlay Mirroring feature to send the display from your Mac to your HD-TV. AirPlay Mirroring requires an Apple TV unit that supports this feature. You can also send the audio from your iMac directly to an AirPlay-enabled receiver or speaker system.

  • Color: Your iMac can use a color profile file that controls the colors on your display. This setting comes in handy for graphic artists and illustrators who need color output from their printers that closely matches the colors displayed by the iMac. Click the Calibrate button to launch the Display Calibrator, which can create a custom ColorSync profile and calibrate the colors that you see on your monitor.
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Figure 6-4: The Displays pane allows you to change monitor resolutions in a jiffy.

The Desktop & Screen Saver pane

Hey, who doesn’t want to choose their own background? And what about that nifty screen saver you just downloaded from that movie website? You can change both your background and screen saver by using these options on the Desktop & Screen Saver pane.

The settings on the Desktop tab (as shown in Figure 6-5) include

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Figure 6-5: Show The Man who’s boss and pick your own Desktop background.

  • Current Desktop picture: To change your Desktop background, click a thumbnail. You can also drag a picture from a Finder window or the desktop and drop it into the well (the fancy technical name for the square box with the sunken look). Mavericks automatically updates your Desktop so that you can see the results. To open another collection of images from Apple, click the desired collection folder from the list on the left of the pane. If you want to open a different folder with your own images, click the Add button (which bears a plus sign) at the lower left of the pane and then navigate to that folder. Click Choose to select a folder and display the images it contains.
  • Layout: You can automatically fit an image to your screen, tile your background image (repeat it across the Desktop), center it, and stretch it to fill the screen. Because the images from Apple are all sized correctly already, the Layout pop-up menu appears only when you’re using your own pictures (so it’s not visible in this figure).
  • Change Picture: If you like a bit of automatic variety on your Desktop, select the Change Picture check box. You can click the pop-up menu to set the delay period. The images in the current collection or folder are then displayed in the sequence in which they appear in the thumbnail list.
  • Random Order: Select this check box to throw caution utterly to the wind and display random screens from the current collection or folder!
  • Translucent Menu Bar: When enabled, this feature turns your Finder and application menu bars semi-opaque, allowing them to blend in somewhat with your Desktop background. If you’d rather have a solid-color menu bar, deselect this check box.

The settings on the Screen Saver tab include

  • Screen Savers: From the Screen Savers list at the left, click any screen saver to preview it (on the right). To try out the screen saver in full-screen mode, click the Test button. (You can end the test by moving your cursor.) If the screen saver module that you select has any configurable settings, you can set them from the pane on the right (or, depending on the screen saver, you can also click the Screen Saver Options button to display them). Choose the Random screen saver to display a different screen saver module each time the screen saver is activated.
  • Start After: Drag this slider to choose the period of inactivity that triggers the screen saver. Choose Never if you want to disable the screen saver entirely. (Note: The Start After delay you set should be less time than the Display Sleep delay you set in the System Preferences Energy Saver pane, or you won’t see the great screen saver at all. I discuss the Energy Saver pane later in this chapter.)
  • Show with Clock: Select this check box, and Mavericks adds a clock display to your screen saver (a great help for those of us who spend many minutes on the phone).
  • Hot Corners: Click this button to display a drop-down sheet and then click any of the four pop-up menus at the four corners of the screen to select that corner as an activating hot corner. (Moving your mouse pointer to a hot corner immediately activates the screen saver.) You can also specify a corner as a disabling hot corner; that is, as long as the mouse pointer stays in that corner, the screen saver is disabled. Note that you can also set the Dashboard and Mission Control activation corners from here. (Read on for the entire lowdown.)

    tip.eps For additional security, check out the Security & Privacy pane in System Preferences. On the General pane, you’ll find the Require Password After Sleep or Screen Saver Begins check box. Select the check box and choose the desired delay.

The Mission Control pane

Figure 6-6 illustrates the Mission Control, Spaces, and Dashboard settings that you can configure in this group. You can use Mission Control to view all the application windows that you’re using at one time so that you can select a new active window. Or you can move all windows aside so that you can see your Desktop. Dashboard presents a number of widgets (mini-applications), which you can summon and hide with a single key. (Find more on Mission Control, Spaces, and Dashboard in Chapter 5.)

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Figure 6-6: Tweak the operation of Mission Control from this pane.

Here’s what you can control about Mission Control (horrible pun not intended but accepted nonetheless):

  • Hot Corners: Click the button at the lower left to specify your hot corner settings. These four pop-up menus operate just like the Hot Corners/Active Screen Corners of the Desktop & Screen Savers pane, but they control the operation of the OS X screen management features. Click one to specify that corner as
    • All Windows corner: Displays all windows on your Desktop
    • Application Windows corner: Displays only the windows from the active application
    • Desktop corner: Moves all windows to the outside of the screen to uncover your Desktop
    • Dashboard corner: Displays your Dashboard widgets
    • Notification Center corner: Displays the Notification Center strip at the right side of your Desktop

    Choose Launchpad to activate the Launchpad screen. Note that you can also set the Screen Saver Start and Disable corners from here, as well as put your display to sleep.

  • Keyboard and Mouse Shortcuts: Use each pop-up menu to set the key sequences (and mouse button settings) for Mission Control, Application windows, Show Desktop, and the Dashboard.

    remember.eps You’re not limited to just the keyboard and mouse shortcuts on the pop-up menus. Press the Shift, Control, Option, and maccmd.eps keys while a pop-up menu is open, and you see these modifiers appear as menu choices! (Heck, you can even combine modifiers, such as maccmd.eps+Shift+F9 instead of just F9.)

    tip.eps By default, Mavericks displays your Dashboard as a Space within the Mission Control screen. If you prefer your Dashboard widgets to appear as an overlay (as they did in previous versions of OS X), deselect the Show Dashboard as a Space check box.

  • Automatically Rearrange Spaces Based on Most Recent Use: If this check box is selected, Mission Control presents your most recently used Spaces first within the thumbnails at the top of the screen.
  • When Switching to an Application: When selected, this check box allows you to switch applications between Spaces desktops using the maccmd.eps+Tab shortcut. Mavericks jumps to the desktop that has an open window for the application you choose, even if that desktop is not currently active.
  • Group Windows by Application: When selected, this check box automatically arranges windows in the Mission Control screen by the application that created them.
  • Displays Have Separate Spaces: If you have multiple monitors connected to your iMac, you can select this check box to create a separate Spaces display for each monitor.

The General pane

The talented General pane (shown in Figure 6-7) determines the look and operation of the controls that appear in application windows and Finder windows. It looks complex, but I cover each option here.

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Figure 6-7: Appearances might not be everything, but they’re easy to find on the General pane.

The settings include

  • Appearance: Open this pop-up menu to specify the color Mavericks uses for buttons, menus, and windows.
  • Highlight Color: Open this pop-up menu to choose the color that highlights selected text in fields, pop-up menus, and drop-down list boxes.
  • Sidebar Icon Size: Select the size of the icons in the Finder window Sidebar, which is the strip to the left of the Finder window that displays your devices and favorite locations on your system. If you have a large number of hard drives or you’ve added several folders to the sidebar, reducing the size of the icons will allow you to display more of them without scrolling.
  • Show Scroll Bars: Use these radio buttons to specify when Mavericks should display scroll bars within a window. By default, they’re placed automatically when necessary, but you can choose to display scroll bars always, or only when you’re actually scrolling through a document.
  • Click in the Scroll Bar To: By default, OS X jumps to the next or previous page when you click in an empty portion of the scroll bar. Select the Jump to the Spot That’s Clicked radio button to scroll the document to the approximate position in relation to where you click.
  • Ask To Keep Changes When Closing Documents: If you select this check box, Mavericks prompts you for confirmation if you attempt to close a document with unsaved changes. If the check box is deselected, Mavericks will allow the unsaved document to be closed without saving a new version.
  • Close Windows When Quitting an Application: If this check box is selected, the Resume feature built in to Mavericks automatically saves the state of an application when you quit. When you launch the application again, Mavericks restores all the application windows and opens the documents you were working on when you quit. In effect, you can continue using the application just as if you had never quit. If you deselect the check box, Mavericks will not restore your work, and you’ll have to load your document again; this is the same action taken by earlier versions of OS X.
  • Recent Items: By default, Mavericks displays ten recent applications, documents, and servers within Recent Items in the Apple menu. Need more? Just open the corresponding pop-up menu and specify up to 50 items.
  • Use LCD Font Smoothing: By default, this check box is selected, making the text on your iMac’s LED display appear more like the printed page.

The Energy Saver pane

I’m an environmentalist (it’s surprising how many techno-types are colored green), so this pane (as shown in Figure 6-8) is pretty doggone important. When you use them correctly, you not only save electricity but also even invoke the Power of Mavericks to automatically start and shut down your iMac whenever you like!

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Figure 6-8: Reduce your iMac’s power consumption from the Energy Saver pane.

To save electricity, drag the Computer Sleep slider to a delay period that triggers sleep mode when you’re away from the keyboard for a significant period of time. (I prefer 30 minutes.) If your iMac must always remain alert and you want to disable sleep mode entirely, choose Never. You can set the delay period for blanking your monitor separately from the sleep setting with the Display Sleep slider.

To conserve the maximum juice and cut down on wear, select the Put Hard Disks to Sleep When Possible check box to power-down your hard drives when they’re not needed. (This might cause a delay of a second or two while loading or saving files because the drives must spin back up — if you’re sharing files with others on your network, sleeping hard drives can also significantly slow file transfers.)

tip.eps You can set Mavericks to start or shut down your iMac at a scheduled time. Click the Schedule button and then select the desired schedules (the Start Up or Wake check box and the Shut Down/Restart/Sleep pop-up menu) to enable them. Set the trigger time by clicking the up and down arrows next to the time display for each schedule. Click OK to return to the Energy Saver pane.

Select the Wake for Network Access check box to wake your iMac from sleep mode whenever your computer is accessed remotely across your network. Mavericks can restart your iMac automatically after a power failure — a good feature for those running their iMac as a server, because your server will automatically come back online after power is restored.

The Dock pane

You can use the settings shown in Figure 6-9 to configure the Dock’s behavior until it fits your personality like a glove:

  • Size: Pretty self-explanatory. Just drag the slider to change the scale of the Dock.
  • Magnification: When you select this check box, each icon in your Dock swells like a puffer fish when you move your mouse cursor over it. (Just how much it magnifies is determined by the Magnification slider.) I really like this feature because I resize my Dock smaller, and I have a large number of Dock icons.
  • Position on Screen: Select a radio button here to position the Dock on the left, bottom, or right edge of your iMac’s Desktop.
  • Minimize Windows Using: Mavericks includes two cool animations that you can choose from when shrinking a window to the Dock (and expanding it back to the Desktop). Open the Minimize Windows Using pop-up menu to specify the genie-in-a-bottle effect or a scale-up-or-down-incrementally effect.
  • Double-Click a Window’s Title Bar to Minimize: Select this check box to minimize a Finder or application window by simply double-clicking the window’s title bar.
  • Minimize Windows into Application Icon: If this check box is not selected, minimized application windows appear as thumbnail icons at the right side of the Dock. To minimize application windows into the application icon in the Dock — which can save space on your Dock — select this check box. (To restore a window that’s been minimized into the application icon, right-click the icon on the Dock and choose Restore from the menu that appears.)
  • Animate Opening Applications: Are you into aerobics? How about punk rock and slam dancing? Active souls who like animation likely get a kick out of the bouncing application icons on the Dock. They indicate that you’ve launched an application and that it’s loading. You can turn off this bouncing behavior by deselecting this check box.
  • Automatically Hide and Show the Dock: Select this check box, and the Dock disappears until you need it. (Depending on the size of your Dock, the Desktop real estate that you gain can be significant.) To display a hidden Dock, move your mouse pointer over the corresponding edge of the Desktop.
  • Show Indicator Lights for Open Applications: OS X indicates which applications are running in the Dock with a small blue dot in front of the icon. To disable these indicators, deselect this check box.
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Figure 6-9: Customize your Dock by using these controls.

The Sharing pane

So you’re in a neighborly mood and want to share your toys with others on your local wired or wireless network. Perhaps you’d like to start your own website or protect yourself against the Bad Guys on the Internet. All these fun diversions are available from the Sharing pane in System Preferences, as shown in Figure 6-10.

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Figure 6-10: Share your toys with others by using the controls on the Sharing pane.

Click the Edit button to change the default network name assigned to your iMac during the installation process. Your current network name is listed in the Computer Name text field.

Each entry in the services list controls a specific type of sharing. To turn on any of these services, select the On check box for that service. To turn off a service, click the corresponding On check box to deselect it.

warning.eps From a security standpoint, I highly recommend that you enable only those services that you actually use, because each service that you enable automatically makes your Mavericks firewall open to allow that service. A Mark’s Maxim to remember:

tip.eps Poking too many holes in your firewall is not A Good Thing.

When you click one of the services in the list, the right side of the Sharing pane changes to display the settings you can specify for that particular service. To display all the details on these options, click the Help button (the question mark) at the lower-right corner of the System Preferences dialog.

The Time Machine pane

Mac users are justifiably proud about the Time Machine automatic backup feature that’s built in to Mavericks. You can easily configure how Time Machine handles your backups from the pane shown in Figure 6-11. Of course, you’ll need an external hard drive (or an AirPort Time Capsule wireless backup station) for the best backup security. Note that Time Machine won’t work with an internal or external DVD drive: It’s got to be a hard drive. (Note, however, that if your Wi-Fi network uses an AirPort Extreme base station, you can connect an external hard drive to the base station’s USB port for use with Time Machine. Your iMac will back up wirelessly to the base station’s drive, just like Apple’s AirPort Time Capsule device!)

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Figure 6-11: Put Time Machine to work, and your data is always backed up.

To enable Time Machine, click the On switch and then click the Select Disk button to choose a disk to hold your Time Machine backup data. Time Machine backs up all the hard drives on your system. However, to save time and hard drive space, Time Machine allows you to exclude specific drives and folders from the backup process. Click the Options button, click the Add button (with the plus sign) to select the drives or folders you want to exclude, and they appear in the Exclude list.

tip.eps To remove an excluded item, select it in the list and click the Delete button (with the minus sign). Note that the Estimated Size of Full Backup figure increases, and Time Machine adds the item you deleted from the list to the next backup.

tip.eps By default, Mavericks warns you when deleting older backup files, but you can turn this warning off from the Options sheet as well.

If you enable the Show Time Machine in Menu Bar check box, you can elect to back up your Mac immediately by clicking the Time Machine icon in the Finder menu bar and then choosing Back Up Now.

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