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- <h1>TinkerTool: Frequently
- Asked Questions </h1>
- <h2>What is TinkerTool?</h2>
- <p>TinkerTool is an application which gives you access to additional preference
- settings Apple has built into Mac OS X. This allows to activate hidden features
- in the operating system and in some of the applications that come with the
- system.</p>
- <p>TinkerTool does not provide any features itself. Its single task is to give
- you an extended interface to your personal preference settings. The tool will
- never change anything in the operating system. For this reason, the integrity
- of your system is not put at risk. All settings are restricted to the user
- accounts that launch TinkerTool. If you have multiple user accounts on your
- computer, settings of different users will not affect each other.</p>
- <p>The feature set of Mac OS X varies greatly between different operating system
- versions. For this reason, TinkerTool must automatically adapt to the system
- it is running on. The settings available in each system version are listed <a href="http://www.bresink.com/osx/TinkerTool.html">at
- the official web page</a>.</p>
- <p> When you detect a preference setting that causes a compatibility problem
- with a third-party application, you can simply reset this or all preferences
- to their previous values. </p>
- <h2>Can I have a manual for TinkerTool?</h2>
- <p>There is no documentation other than this English FAQ list. Because TinkerTool
- doesn't provide any features, there is not much that could be documented. The
- tool has a single function: If you click on setting “X”, TinkerTool
- will change your personal preference setting “X”. Apple may change
- the meaning of setting “X” any time at their own discretion, so
- we have absolutely no influence on the effects each setting may achieve.</p>
- <h2>Is TinkerTool compatible with Mac OS X Server?</h2>
- <p>Yes, there is no difference between Mac OS X and the corresponding version
- of Mac OS X Server. The Server version only comes with additional administration
- and service software. So TinkerTool works the same on both system versions.</p>
- <h2>What version of TinkerTool should I use for which version of Mac OS X?</h2>
- <p>Versions of TinkerTool are not directly related to versions of Mac OS X. TinkerTool
- uses unique technology to automatically adapt its user interface to the operating
- system version you are currently running. In addition to that, there
- are currently three different applications in the TinkerTool series, designed
- for three product generations of Mac OS X:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>For Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and Mac OS 10.7 Lion, use <strong><a href="http://www.bresink.com/osx/TinkerTool.html">TinkerTool</a></strong>. The
- program with the standard name TinkerTool is always designed to be compatible
- with the latest versions of Apple's operating systems.</li>
- <li>For Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, use <strong><a href="http://www.bresink.com/osx/TinkerToolClassicG2.html">TinkerTool
- Classic Generation 2</a></strong>.</li>
- <li>For Mac OS X 10.1 Puma, Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar, and Mac
- OS X 10.3 Panther, use <strong><a href="http://www.bresink.com/osx/TinkerToolClassic.html">TinkerTool Classic</a></strong>.</li>
- <li>Mac OS X Server 1.0, Mac OS X Public Beta, and Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah are
- no longer supported by current releases of the TinkerTool product series.</li>
- </ul>
- <h2>Could you please add feature “X” to TinkerTool?</h2>
- <p>In most cases, the answer is no. TinkerTool does not provide any features,
- so it cannot add any. The features you are seeing are provided by Mac OS X
- and controlled by Apple. TinkerTool is only a helper application to activate
- them.</p>
- <p>However, if you know an additional built-in preference setting neither accessible
- in System Preferences nor in TinkerTool, suggestions are welcome. Note that
- we sometimes have to deny integration of a preference setting because the setting
- may have a negative effect on some applications (which is the reason why Apple
- did not make access to this setting publicly available).</p>
- <h2>I have enabled double scroll arrows at both ends of scroll bars (Snow Leopard
- only). Why doesn't this work with iTunes?</h2>
- <p>All recent versions of iTunes use their own user interface which is basically
- not fully compatible with the original Aqua design of Mac OS X. Unfortunately,
- iTunes is not capable of supporting the preference setting to display four
- arrows in scroll bars.</p>
- <h2>Are there other unexpected issues when using double scroll arrows at both
- ends of scroll bars. (Snow Leopard only)?</h2>
- <p>Yes, there are at least two other effects to be aware of: If a scroll bar
- is so small, that there isn't enough space to display all four buttons, the
- scroll bar might disappear completely. If you are using Safari 5.0.5 or later,
- pressing the uppermost scroll button in a window displaying RSS articles may
- cause Safari to scroll one page down instead of scrolling one line up.</p>
- <h2>Are there alternative ways to restart the Finder?</h2>
- <p>Yes, in up-to-date versions of Mac OS X, you can hold down the option (alt)
- key while right-clicking the Finder icon in the Dock. An item to restart the
- Finder will be displayed in the context menu.</p>
- <h2>There are .DS_Store files everywhere! Has TinkerTool destroyed my system?</h2>
- <p>No, you just have enabled the Finder's “show all files” option
- with TinkerTool. The .DS_Store files are created by the Finder during its normal
- course of operation but they are invisible by default. The Finder will automatically
- put a .DS_Store file into every folder you have opened. These files are used
- to save the positions of icons, the size of the respective Finder window, the
- window's background, and many more view options. While professional users consider
- the .DS_Store files to be a design flaw of the Mac OS X Finder, a mechanism
- like this is necessary when opening Finder windows for exchangeable disk media
- to give former users of the classic Mac OS the same user experience they had
- in previous operating system versions. If you don't like to see the .DS_Store
- files, disable the Finder option <cite>Show hidden and system files</cite> in TinkerTool,
- or replace the Finder by a better file management application.</p>
- <h2>Can I use TinkerTool to change fonts in Mac OS X?</h2>
- <p>No, this has never been a feature of TinkerTool and this would not be a good
- idea. Applications such as word processing or layout programs would become
- unusable if TinkerTool would somehow force them to replace give fonts with
- other fonts.</p>
- <p>The pane “Fonts” is designed to change your personal preferred defaults
- for fonts. Applications designed in a user-friendly way will not request
- to use a certain pre-specified font for controls in their user interface, they
- will select one of Mac OS X's nine font categories instead. For example, an
- application displaying a headline for some controls in a window will not send
- the request to Mac OS X to use the font “Lucida Grande, bold, 13pt” for this
- headline. Instead, it will ask Mac OS X to use the system font the user is
- currently preferring for the display of headlines. This can be any font of
- your choice, currently set for the category <em>System (headlines)</em> in
- TinkerTool. The developers of applications determine for each single use of
- typographic output if they like to use a specific font, “hard-wired” in the
- application, or if they like to use a generic font, oriented at the user's
- personal preferences.</p>
- <h2>When specifying preferred fonts, can I use color, shadow, or other effect
- settings?</h2>
- <p>No, Mac OS X does not allow this. Although it is possible to control shadows
- and similar options via the system's font panel, only font type and font size
- will actually be set. All other settings you can establish for fonts will be
- ignored.</p>
- <h2>Why is the Safari option <cite>Redirect all links opening new windows into
- foreground tabs</cite> missing when I have Safari 5 or later on my computer?</h2>
- <p>For Safari 5, Apple made this setting official and even further policies have
- been added. The pop-up button of Safari 5 at <cite>Preferences > Tabs > Open
- pages in tabs instead of windows</cite> supersedes the older inofficial setting.
- TinkerTool is aware of this and disables the previous setting after you have
- upgraded to version 5 of Safari.</p>
- <h2>Can I completely disable font smoothing?</h2>
- <p>No and yes. Although Mac OS X does not support a feature to disable
- font smoothing generally, you can use the simple trick to set a very high size
- limit for the smoothing of fonts. If you set the limit to 144 points, basically
- all fonts in the user interface will no longer be smoothed. </p>
- <h2>Why can't I disable font smoothing for the standard font of the Mac OS X
- user interface?</h2>
- <p>In all current operating system versions, Mac OS X has lost the feature to
- change the font smoothing settings for the font <cite>Lucida Grande</cite>,
- the default font used in most Mac OS X dialog windows. This problem is not
- restricted to TinkerTool: Apple's original System Preferences application shows
- the same problem if you are changing the font smoothing limit in the Appearance
- preference pane. We made Apple aware of this issue, but they don't plan to
- fix it. </p>
- <h2>How can I drag Dashboard widgets to my Desktop?</h2>
- <p>To successfully drag a widget to your Desktop please use the following detailed
- instructions:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>Make sure the option <cite>Dashboard: Enable Dashboard developer mode</cite> is
- checked in the <cite>Applications</cite> pane of TinkerTool.</li>
- <li>Open Dashboard. If you haven't changed the default keyboard settings, this
- is done by pressing the F12 key.</li>
- <li>Select the widget you want to have on your Desktop. Click in the widget
- and keep the mouse button pressed.</li>
- <li>While the mouse button is still hold down, move the mouse slowly and close
- Dashboard (by pressing F12 again) at the same time.</li>
- </ol>
- <p>The standard widgets will disappear but the widget you are moving will stay
- on screen. When you release the mouse button you can use the widget like a
- normal application. To remove the widget
- from your Desktop, hold down the option (alt) key and move the mouse cursor
- onto the widget. A close button will appear which allows you to remove the
- widget.</p>
- <h2>Won't it be possible to disable Lion's Resume feature completely, in particular
- the checkbox
- <cite>Reopen windows when logging back in</cite> of the shutdown dialog?</h2>
- <p>Although this seems to be the most hated and most annoying feature introduced
- with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, there cannot really be a “harmless” way
- to switch this function off. Apple explicitly designed this feature not to
- be controllable by permanent user settings. Only manual intervention by the
- user on each shutdown can temporarily modify this behavior. The reasoning behind
- this is that Lion should make unattended restarts possible without the user
- noticing them. For example, an operating system update could be installed automatically
- at night, and when the user returns the next morning, she can just continue
- to work because all running applications have been magically restored to their
- previous state, as if nothing had happened. Unless Apple changes this maintenance
- strategy of Lion, it won't be possible to permanently disable the reopen-windows-on-login
- feature without negative side effects. Only drastic measures could circumvent
- this, e.g. automatically running scripts on each shutdown that delete the
- user's Resume data. Such destructive manipulations won't become part of TinkerTool,
- however.</p>
- <h2>What is the difference between TinkerTool and TinkerTool System?</h2>
- <p>The applications share the same user interface and internal technologies.
- However, the features and target group of the applications are very different:
- TinkerTool is a utility that allows you to set personal preference settings
- Apple has built into Mac OS X. TinkerTool is not capable of changing any system
- settings or other settings that may affect more than your private user account.
- For this reason, you don't need administrative permission to use TinkerTool.
- The tool can be used in professional networks where you have limited access,
- for example students working with the campus network.</p>
- <p>TinkerTool System on the other hand is directed to system administrators,
- consultants or experienced users that need to change and optimize operating
- system settings. This will affect all users that share a computer. Only user
- accounts with administrative permission can use TinkerTool System, Mac OS X
- does not allow access by standard users.</p>
- <p>The tools do not share any duplicate settings or features. They complement
- one another, to have the full feature set you'll need both applications. It
- is not planned to offer the system tool in other languages than English and
- German.</p>
- <h2>How can I remove TinkerTool?</h2>
- <p>Just drag the application to the trash. Because TinkerTool doesn't install
- or change anything in the operating system, that's all. You might consider
- resetting Mac OS X's preferences you have changed via TinkerTool
- to the pre-installation state before removing the tool. (See the next item.)</p>
- <h2>I used TinkerTool for a while, then I deleted it. But all of its settings
- are still effective, what should I do?</h2>
- <p>As mentioned above, TinkerTool just changes user preference settings of Mac
- OS X. Applications will respect their settings no matter if TinkerTool is on
- your disk or not. If you want to reset your configuration, just open the Reset
- pane in TinkerTool, choose one of the reset buttons, log out and log in.</p>
- <h2>Why did Apple include so many hidden features in Mac OS X?</h2>
- <p>Of course we cannot officially speak for Apple, but there are several reasons
- why some built-in preference settings of Mac OS X are usually kept under the
- hood:</p>
- <ol>
- <li><strong>Settings for professional users:</strong> Some settings, e.g. the
- preference to show hidden and system files in the Finder, are official features
- of Mac OS X but Apple intentionally does not disclose them to normal end
- users. Those features are documented to developers or to professional users
- which read the technical manuals of Mac OS X. This way Apple can keep the
- user interface simple, at the same time not excluding particular user groups
- from using advanced features.<br />
- Especially in professional networks, system
- administrators even don't like the graphical user interface but prefer shell
- scripts and the Terminal command-line. So there are also cases where Apple
- considers it too costly to develop a graphical user interface, thinking that
- most users would not use it.</li>
- <li><strong>OPENSTEP settings untouched by Apple:</strong> Technically seen,
- Mac OS X is not a successor of Mac OS but of NeXT's operating system <cite>OPENSTEP
- for Mach</cite>.
- This operating system contained several features which are still part of
- Mac OS X. In some cases, Apple does not want to touch
- some of the old features, because this could have the risk of unwanted side
- effects. For this reason, these functions have never been deactivated but
- are “sleeping” in
- the OS.</li>
- <li><strong>Features hidden for design and marketing reasons:</strong> System
- developers usually think far ahead while designing their applications. For
- this reason they prepare or implement many features without a direct order.
- In some cases they “play” with some features or need them
- for temporary testing purposes. However, superiors or the marketing division
- might later decide that a feature is “too advanced”, “not
- needed by most users”, or “doesn't look right”. Because
- it can be very expensive and time-consuming to remove program code, those
- functions are only deactivated, not deleted, and we have another “sleeping”
- feature.</li>
- </ol>
- <p>This list of reasons is not necessarily complete. The strategy of hiding built-in
- features is not unusual, you can see the same on other operating systems as
- well. For example, Microsoft® has a tool called <cite>Microsoft PowerToys
- </cite>(formerly called<cite> Tweak UI</cite>) which
- does a similar job on MS-Windows® as TinkerTool does on Mac OS X.</p>
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