Mac OS X Leopard only: You wouldn't think that Leopard's new Quick Look feature would work anywhere but from Finder, but you'd be wrong. From the command line in Terminal, you can invoke Quick Look to preview the contents of a file. Tips web site Mac OS X Hints details how: the command is qlmanage -p somefile where somefile is your document. As Mac OS X Hints recommends, setting up an alias (qlf, perhaps?) is a good way to save your typing fingers when reusing this technique. window.google_analytics_uacct = 'UA-142218-1';var google_adnum = 0; /* only insert this line for your first ad unit */function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) {var domain = '';var domainParts = document.referrer.split("/");if (domainParts.length > 2) {domainParts = domainParts[2].split(".");domain = domainParts[domainParts.length - 2];}var companions = document.querySelectorAll('.js_ad300-companion');var blockHeight = 0;if (companions.length > 0) {var companion = companions[0];blockHeight = companion.offsetHeight;}var onKinja = location.host.substr(-1 * "kinja.com".length) === "kinja.com";var fromSearch = (domain == "google") || (domain == "bing") || (domain == "yahoo") || (domain == "ask");var cookieString = "fromSearch=1";if (fromSearch) {document.cookie = cookieString;}var inSearchSession = document.cookie.indexOf(cookieString) != -1;var shouldShowAds = !onKinja && (fromSearch || inSearchSession);// && blockHeight > 400);if (shouldShowAds) {var s = '';var i;if (google_ads.length == 0) {return;}s += '
No comments: