Os x lion default email program




















Mysterious to me that this question is considered off-topic. OMG how can they distribute a unix system without make sheesh — Gus. Instead of downloading 1. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Abdul Rahman 2, 4 4 gold badges 28 28 silver badges 36 36 bronze badges. Tarmo Tarmo 5, 2 2 gold badges 17 17 silver badges 12 12 bronze badges. This stumped me for a while. I upgraded to Lion, reinstalled Xcode and make was still not in my path. Using 4.

Now 'make' works from the command line. Show 1 more comment. Cajunluke Cajunluke 3, 27 27 silver badges 28 28 bronze badges. Indeed, installing new Xcode resolved my problem. Scroll down to Tarmo 's answer to see how to do it in Nick White Nick White 2, 16 16 silver badges 10 10 bronze badges. Now "make" is available and you can check by opening terminal and typing: make -v The result should look like: GNU Make 3.

Able Mac Able Mac 6 6 silver badges 8 8 bronze badges. If you installed xcode and upgraded to mountain lion, or you don't have the latest command line tools installed, or you have zsh or other shells, you can shortcut to some of the embedded tools in the developer directory with: xcrun make.

Matthew F. Robben Matthew F. Robben 1, 1 1 gold badge 11 11 silver badges 6 6 bronze badges. Bruno Vieira 3, 1 1 gold badge 22 22 silver badges 35 35 bronze badges. Andy Andy 31 1 1 bronze badge.

So if I type Joe , for example, the top suggestion is Message contains , but just below that is a list of people, with Macworld contributor Joe Kissell at the top. Mail offers many new options for searching your messages. As with Safari and many other stock Lion apps, Mail also gains a full-screen mode. Move the mouse cursor to the top of the screen and the menu bar slides into view. For Mail, the main benefit of full-screen mode is that it gets rid of a bit of onscreen clutter the menu bar and Mail-window title bar while you work with your email.

Mail does go a step further than, say, Safari, however: When opening a message in its own window, or when composing a new message, background Mail windows are dimmed to let you better focus on the message window. Still, for many people, email is something we deal with in chunks throughout the day—and frequently while switching between Mail and other programs and the Finder.

Not to mention that for those of us with multiple displays, full-screen mode simply empties all but one display. In Snow Leopard, you set up email accounts within Mail, contacts-server accounts within Address Book, calendar accounts within iCal, chat accounts within iChat, and so on.

Lion lets you set up accounts for multiple services in one convenient location. Click Add Account, and the account is created using the login information you already entered. Speaking of accounts, Mail, iCal, and Address Book also now support Exchange accounts, and you can now set your Exchange vacation message from within within the Info window for your Exchange account right-click or Control-click on your Exchange-account Inbox and then choose Get Account Info. Besides the big changes mentioned above, Lion Mail includes a number of simpler changes that nevertheless offer improvements in productivity compared to its predecessor.

For starters, Quick Look support has been expanded: In addition to being able to quickly preview attachments, you can now preview the websites of many URLs in incoming email messages by clicking the tiny downward-pointing arrow icon that appears at the end of the URL; if the URL seems phishy, OS X will refuse to preview it, instead displaying a warning.

When you select a mailbox from that list, its contents display in the Message Viewer. This is part of my Mailbox List. Maybe I like having more screen real estate for my actual messages. Maybe I prefer the iPad look. Who knows? OK, Apple. See my little message getting dragged there?



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