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- åWhat Does Virtual Desktop Do?
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- Virtual Desktop, simply put, puts scroll bars on your screen. This is the
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- most intuitive way for most people to operate a desktop which is larger
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- than their screen. This “virtual desktop” can be as large as the user
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- wants it to be, with no additional expense of memory.
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- It also has a mode where the user can inspect and rearrange the layout of
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- windows and icons on the entire virtual desktop.
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- For people who use the same applications every day, Virtual Desktop lets
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- them build “doors,” which make the virtual desktop scroll to a preset
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- location when clicked, in the manner of an old push-button car radio, but
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- more ergonomic.
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- Virtual Desktop also has a number of “usage options” which, when
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- enabled, let you do quick scrolling actions without leaving the application
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- you’re using.
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- xScroll Bars
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- Virtual Desktop puts a horizontal scroll bar along the bottom edge of your
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- main monitor, and a vertical scroll bar along the right or left edge (your
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- choice). In the corner between the scroll bars is a little square anchor
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- window with the Virtual Desktop icon on it, where you can click to make
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- Virtual Desktop active.
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- While Virtual Desktop is active, you can scroll using either scroll bars or
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- keyboard. Press the Page Up or Page Down keys to scroll vertically (or
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- horizontally, with the Option key pressed). Press the Home key to return
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- to the “home” or startup position. Press the End key to go back to where
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- you were when you last pressed Home.
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- By default, the scroll bars only appear while Virtual Desktop is active,
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- but you can have them up all the time, losing a bit of the screen area in
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- exchange for easier scrolling.
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- See the section entitled “Usage Options” below.
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- Reading the scroll bars’ “sliders” tells you where you are on the virtual
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- desktop in relation to all the other items (windows and desktop icons).
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- The extent of the virtual desktop is always padded by at least half a
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- screenful beyond the most extreme item in each direction. To grow the
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- desktop, you can increase that pad factor in increments of half a
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- screenful. As you move items further outward into the pad area, the
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- virtual desktop grows automatically.
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- xFull View Mode
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- If you need to see beyond what your monitor or monitors can display at
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- one time, to get the big picture of all items on the virtual desktop, you can
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- go into Full View mode. There are three ways to do it — by menu
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- command, by keystroke, and by double-clicking on the anchor window.
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- Full View mode takes over the main monitor, covering everything but the
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- menu bar and the scroll bars. It shows a picture of the whole virtual
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- desktop, scaled down to fit, with color-keyed rectangles showing the
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- outline of every application’s windows, including the ones that are hidden.
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- A white area in the background shows what part of the virtual desktop is
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- currently visible through a monitor. In this picture, you can get help
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- balloons to tell you what the windows and icons are, click and drag to
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- rearrange them, and double-click to scroll and bring them to the front so
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- that you can see them. You can also drag the white area to move the
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- desktop view relative to all windows and icons.
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- On one side of the picture, Virtual Desktop shows a set of radio buttons
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- and a list box. There is one radio button for every application which has a
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- window open, plus one at the bottom of the heap for all desktop icons.
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- When you click on a radio button, Virtual Desktop fills the list box with the
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- names of all the items belonging to that group. By selecting an item from
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- the list, you can see where that item is on the virtual desktop.
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- Conversely, you can click on an item in the picture to see its name and
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- what group it belongs to.
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- xDoors
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- At some point, you will begin to imagine a virtually boundless virtual
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- desktop layout for your applications — mail windows here, word
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- processor there, and a picture of your spouse and children in the top
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- corner, in case you forget what they look like. It would be hard to move
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- from location to location using scroll bars, and not very efficient using
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- Full View mode, so Virtual Desktop gives you a better tool for the job:
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- doors.
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- To make a door, you scroll to the location you want to work in, and tell
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- Virtual Desktop to create a new door. It asks you for a name, and a place
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- on the desktop where it can drop the little door icon window with the name
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- on it. You could build a whole corridor of doors to different places, or use
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- one of the predefined multiple-door arrangements (row, column, cross, or
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- grid). To move from one preset location to another, you just click on a
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- door. The door icon “opens,” and you’re there. Every “room” should
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- have a trash can alias in the lower right corner, of course, but that’s
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- your job.
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- That describes the simplest use of doors. Beyond that, there are some
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- useful preference options you can apply to each door, including one which
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- associates an application with the door, so that Virtual Desktop will make
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- that application active as you jump to where its windows are.
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- xUsage Options
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- This version of Virtual Desktop offers three ways to do virtual desktop
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- scrolling without leaving the active application.
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- First, you can choose a key combination which scrolls the virtual desktop
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- by half a screenful. You choose any combination of the Command, Shift,
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- Option, and Control keys, plus any four keys for the four directions.
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- Second, you can tell Virtual Desktop to watch the Shift key and the mouse
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- pointer. If this option is on, and you move the mouse while the Shift key
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- is pressed, the virtual desktop will “shift” along with the pointer when
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- you release the key.
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- Third, you can tell it to make the scroll bars “persistent.” This means
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- that the scroll bars appear all the time, and if you operate a scroll bar
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- while using another application, Virtual Desktop will return you to that
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- application as soon as it has scrolled the desktop.
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