Open VLC, then Window - Video Effects - Geometry - Transform. From there you can rotate 90/180/270, flip horizontally or vertically, magnify, clone etc. Perfect if you have a p/w locked no remote garage sale projector like mine. Resize, rotate, and flip objects in Pages on Mac You can resize an object freely, to modify its proportions any way you like, or proportionally, to make it larger or smaller without changing its essential shape. You can also set it to have specific dimensions. You can rotate or flip any object except a table, chart, web video, or image gallery. Amazon.com: Acer Chromebook Spin 713 13.5' 2K Touchscreen 2-IN-1 Laptop Computer, Intel Quard-Core i5-10210U (Beats i7-7500U), 8GB DDR4 RAM, 128GB PCIe SSD, WiFi 6, Backlit KB, Chrome OS, BROAGE 16GB Flash Stylus: Computers & Accessories.

  1. Flip And Spin Mac Os 7
  2. Flip And Spin Mac Os Update
  1. We’ve lined up the Galaxy Chromebook 2 and Spin 514 against ASUS’s Flip C436 and Google’s Pixelbook Go, so you can see if a Chrome OS machine is the right choice for you this year.
  2. Then erase your Mac as the final step. Use Disk Utility to erase your Mac Start up from macOS Recovery: Turn on your Mac, then immediately press and hold these two keys until you see an Apple logo or other image: Command (⌘) and R.
On The Flip Side
by Michael Munger


Mac OS X On Intel... Let's Give It A Spin
March 19th, 2001

The future of the Mac OS, at least for the next few years, rests on a Unix foundation. For Observers who are not aware of it, Unix is a system available in many variations, including the well-known Linux. The underpinning of Mac OS X comes from a version of Unix called BSD*. One of the interesting things about Unix systems is that most of the various versions run on PC boxes, meaning computers equipped with Intel processors and AMD processors. This includes the very same BSD variant on which Mac OS X is based.

* BSD stands for Berkeley Software Distribution. The University of California at Berkeley's Computer Systems Research Group, when tinkering with the Unix operating system, made enough significant changes and added enough features, that it was practically a new OS. Therefore, they saw the idea of a separate distribution named BSD as being appropriate.

You can see it coming. Many Mac users are flirting, at least intellectually, with the idea of Mac OS X running on Intel processors. I have seen it discussed in all types of forums, mailing lists and Web editorials. Even The Mac Observer's forums have been witness to this debate. It is a thought-provoking question; sacred cow territory.

Before we start

Could it be done? Could Apple, if such was its desire, produce a version of Mac OS X that runs on Intel based computers?

According to Scott Anguish of Stepwise, who was a NeXTStep and OpenStep developer before Apple acquired the system, porting Mac OS X to PC boxes would not prove to be too much of an obstacle: 'It could be done rather easily... we're talking about writing new drivers and bringing it up on the PC, something that has already been done with Darwin now.'

John Welch, a network administrator who has dealt with every Macintosh system since 1984 and coauthored the Mac OS X Server Administrator's Guide, sees some difficulty. Says Mr. Welch, 'Intel chips are register starved, and microcode heavy. You also have to recode for a crappy vector implementation, slow floating point (this would just kill Quartz), and the fact that RAMBUS is only fast with streaming data, and slow at everything else. That 20-stage pipeline is a pain too, and if you miss, it takes forever to flush it.'

So, according to the two of them, it would be hard, but not impossible. What would it imply for developers?

Mr. Anguish explains, 'If you have no assembly [code], and you are able to isolate your code areas where the endian-ness is an issue it should be easy. But Classic would be a loss and the above could be much harder on Carbon than Cocoa. We've done this on Cocoa before in the Rhapsody days... and it was trivial.' John Welch adds that developing for both versions of Mac OS X would require different code, meaning two different versions of the same application.

It sounds troublesome. Developers who keep up with Macintosh and Windows versions already handle lots of work. The idea of adding another edition would simply be a burden for them. Developer support is key to the success of an operating system environment. This makes me wonder if such a project, while technically doable, would be a curse from the start.

What it would imply for Apple

Apple is a hardware company. It generates profit from hardware sales and it would have to multiply its software sales exponentially to make up for loss of hardware vending.

An Intel version of Mac OS X would likely harm such sales. Without the obligation to buy Apple machines to run Mac OS X, what would justify the purchase of an iMac, an iBook, a PowerBook or a G4? Imagine if Apple goes ahead and does the port, and that the new system becomes incredibly popular with PC buyers. The Macintosh would suffer in the hardware arena when competing with inexpensive PC boxes. As Apple's financial situation depends on hardware sales, it would be a nightmare.

Of course, Apple could think of building its own PC hardware, but it would add on its development burden. Also, to lock buyers into buying Apple hardware, the company would have to lock Mac OS X to a proprietary ROM chip that only they had the right to sell. Research and development require large sums of money. Remember that Apple cannot manufacture cheap machines with 'PC clone-like prices' because good profit margins are vital to its net income. Competition with Dell, Compaq and others on the x86 turf is not even an option. This means that to avoid trouble, Apple would have to choose between the Mac and Intel boxes.

At that rate, why not keep the Macintosh as it is?!? I bet that if you look a the issue from that perspective, it will cool off many people's feelings about Intel processors.

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There are other reasons to believe that Mac OS X should never be available for Intel-based machines.

What about Motorola? Although Apple and 'Moto' have gone through hard times with their processor development and manufacturing, we heard reports about 733 MHz chips being overproduced (!) and that Gigahertz chips will be coming later this year. It also seems that they have been business partners forever. The very idea of beginning a 'menage a trois' involving Intel sounds impossible and a wholesale move to Intel/AMD is no better. Moreover, Apple invested hard cash into PowerPC development with Motorola and IBM. Can it afford to alter its strategy? The PowerPC is Apple's fruit. I am not sure if taking any focus away from it would pay off.

From my perspective, an Intel compatible version of Mac OS X would be doable, but troublesome. It would not be worth the effort if it did not bring substantial new sales in. The Macintosh is Apple's bread and butter, and the company cannot afford to risk any of it.

I have the feeling that such an adventure would turn into a nightmare for Apple and developers alike. The perspective of Apple becoming a software company or selling PC boxes would not excite many people, except maybe a few geeks here and there. If Apple wants success, it needs to go with strength, not to dive into a risky scheme where the likelihood of triumph is anything but certain.

Apple, never let this strange idea tempt you. Let it live as a pipe dream in a few people's minds, but DON'T go any further!

Michael Munger is a French Canadian living in Montreal. He discovered the Mac in 1994 while studying journalism, the profession he loves and practices. He also studied history and communications. In addition to his work at The Mac Observer, he authors the iBasics tutorial column at Low End Mac, and cofounded MacSoldiers in 1998.

You can find more about him at his personal Web site.

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  • In a Finder window, press VO-Right Arrow or VO-Left Arrow to move through the window until you hear “toolbar.” Interact with the toolbar.
  • Press VO-Right Arrow until you hear “view radio group” and then interact with that control. Press VO-Right Arrow key until you hear the view you want to use.

    You can choose from icon, list, column, or Cover Flow view. In Cover Flow view, the browser is split horizontally into two sections. The top section is a graphical view of each item, such as folder icons or a preview of the first page of a document. The bottom section is a list view of the items.

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  • When you have selected a view, stop interacting with the view radio group and the toolbar, and then press VO-Right Arrow to move through the window until you hear “sidebar.”
  • To move down the list of items in the sidebar, press VO-Down Arrow. When you hear the item you want, jump to it in the view browser; you can interact with it.

    To jump, press VO-J. If you’re using VoiceOver gestures, keep a finger on the trackpad and press the Control key.

  • Move to and select the item you want to open, using the method for the view you’re in:
  • Icon view: Use the arrow keys to move to the item you want.

    List view: To move down the list rows, press VO-Down Arrow. To expand and collapse a folder, press VO-. To move the VoiceOver cursor across a row and hear information about an item, press VO-Right Arrow. Or press VO-R to hear the entire row read at once.

    Column view: To move down the list until you find the folder or file you want, use the Down Arrow key. To move into subfolders, press the Right Arrow key.

    Cover Flow view: To flip through the items in the top section and move automatically through the corresponding list rows in the bottom section, press the Left Arrow or Right Arrow key.

    When you find the file or folder you want to open, use the Finder shortcut Command-O or Command-Down Arrow to open it.

    VoiceOver announces when you have selected an alias or a file or folder you don’t have permission to open.