AliasMenu adds menus to the Finder. These menus work exactly like the Apple Menu: they may contain any kind of items (applications, documents, desk accessories, folders, aliases, control panels…). Selecting an item in a menu will open it, as if you had double-clicked it. The menu titles can be replaced by icons, which you'll find useful if you have a small screen. AliasMenu needs System version 7.0 or higher. It doesn't modify the System or the Finder in any way. Installation: drop AliasMenu on your System Folder, the Finder will place it where it must go (in the Control Panels folder). Then restart your Macintosh. AliasMenu will create a new folder within your System Folder, named “AliasMenu Items”, and a subfolder named “1.Alias” within it. You can add up to 8 more subfolders (for a total of 9) which will become as many new menus. The default “1.Alias” subfolder can be renamed or deleted, but it will be created again if the “AliasMenu Items” folder is empty. Subfolder names must start with a digit (1-9) followed by a point, then the menu title you want. The digit will determine the order of your menus in the menu-bar. Example: 1.Folders 2.Applications 3.Utilities (etc.) Warning: • There must not be any space between the digit and the point, or between the point and the name. A subfolder whose name doesn't respect this rule will simply be ignored by AliasMenu. • The digits must be continuous, there must not be any “blank” in their order, i.e. the first menu must have the number 1, the second the number 2 and so on. Otherwise, the menus after the blank may not function correctly. The subfolders can, of course, be replaced by aliases pointing to other folders. Note that in this case the menu will be created according to the alias name, not the original. So you may give any title you want to your menus. In any case, you'll need to change the alias name to add the numeric prefix it needs, as described above. Some examples of useful menus: • An “Applications” menu, whose corresponding subfolder contains aliases to your favourite applications. • A “Utilities” menu pointing to other applications of this kind (antivirus, alias manager, back-up software…). • A “Panels” menu, created via an alias of the Control Panels folder, so you have instant access to all your control panels. • A “System” menu containing aliases to the System Folder and its subfolders. • A “Folders” menu pointing to your favourite or “current work” folders. Important: the “AliasMenu Items” folder can only contain subfolders (or aliases to folders), whose names will determine the order of the menus. If you drop an application or a document in the “AliasMenu Items” folder, it will be ignored: it must reside in a subfolder, which will specify in which menu it will appear. Control Panel: AliasMenu automatically adds a first item to the first menu to give instant access to its control panel. You may disable this option in the control panel, and decide if you want the menus before or after the “Special” menu.