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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Operating System
Migrating from El Capitan to High Sierra on new Mac - major problems.
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<blockquote data-quote="MacInWin" data-source="post: 1811409" data-attributes="member: 396914"><p>Save As is well and visible in Mojave. I see it in Safari, Pages, Numbers, Word, Excel. Where is it missing for you? </p><p></p><p>On my wide screen monitor Finder, (I presume that is what you are talking about), has grey lines and white lines to help you track across to find the right data for any file. This arrangement is, I believe, the default. It looks kind of like the old barred paper from mainframe printers. </p><p></p><p>Wrong. I just did exactly that. I chose 80 files, applied a tag, then reselected them all and removed the tag. Done. Used the shift key to select them both times.</p><p></p><p>While "bounce" as a function is not there in Mail, it's simple enough to write a rule in Mail to bounce a message back to the sender when mail arrives. You can even set the action based on which address is in the "To:" field of the incoming so that you can customize the return message. (I'm presuming your reference to "bounce" is similar to Outlook's "out of office" function. I have never actually used anything called "bounce" in Mail.)</p><p></p><p>Bottom line: Most of your complaints about Mojave lost functions are not actually lost, just implemented in a different way. Change is not hard when taken incrementally, but can be brutal if small changes are put off until they become, in toto, major.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MacInWin, post: 1811409, member: 396914"] Save As is well and visible in Mojave. I see it in Safari, Pages, Numbers, Word, Excel. Where is it missing for you? On my wide screen monitor Finder, (I presume that is what you are talking about), has grey lines and white lines to help you track across to find the right data for any file. This arrangement is, I believe, the default. It looks kind of like the old barred paper from mainframe printers. Wrong. I just did exactly that. I chose 80 files, applied a tag, then reselected them all and removed the tag. Done. Used the shift key to select them both times. While "bounce" as a function is not there in Mail, it's simple enough to write a rule in Mail to bounce a message back to the sender when mail arrives. You can even set the action based on which address is in the "To:" field of the incoming so that you can customize the return message. (I'm presuming your reference to "bounce" is similar to Outlook's "out of office" function. I have never actually used anything called "bounce" in Mail.) Bottom line: Most of your complaints about Mojave lost functions are not actually lost, just implemented in a different way. Change is not hard when taken incrementally, but can be brutal if small changes are put off until they become, in toto, major. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
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Migrating from El Capitan to High Sierra on new Mac - major problems.
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