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Some General Tips for Switch to Mac From Windows

Sales of Apple’s Macintosh computers have been growing much faster than PC sales overall, with many new Mac buyers switching from years of using Windows computers. For that reason, every month I get emails from readers asking about the differences in using the Windows and Macintosh operating systems.

While the Windows and Mac user interfaces are broadly similar, they do have subtle variations in day-to-day use that require some re-education for switchers. And because there are so many fewer Mac users than Windows users, help from friends and co-workers can be harder to obtain than it is for people switching the other way, to Windows from Mac.

So, here’s a quick tip sheet explaining a few of the most common differences in the daily use of Windows XP (MSFT), from which most people would be switching, and Apple’s (AAPL) Mac OS X Leopard, which switchers would be adopting.

This column isn’t an argument for making the switch to a Mac, merely an attempt to help those who have done so, or who are considering doing so. Of course, all Macs currently sold can run Windows and Windows programs concurrently with the Mac operating system. But this guide is for folks who intend to use their Macs primarily with Leopard, not Windows.

Menu Bars: In Windows, each program typically has its own menu bar. On the Mac, there’s a single menu bar at the top of the screen that changes, depending on which program you are actively using.

Task Bar: The equivalent of the Windows XP Task Bar on the Mac is the Dock. Unlike the Task Bar, which primarily holds icons representing open windows, the Mac Dock primarily holds icons of programs you use most often. To place a program onto the Dock, you just drag its icon there. To remove it, you just drag its icon off the Dock and it disappears in a puff of animated smoke.

Start Menu: There is no Start Menu on a Mac. Its functions are divided between the Dock and the Apple menu at the upper left of the Mac screen.

Control Panel: The Mac equivalent of the Windows Control Panel is called System Preferences, and it can be launched from either the Dock or the Apple menu.

Keyboard shortcuts: Common Windows keyboard commands, such as Ctrl-S for Save, Ctrl-P for Print, and many others, are also available on the Mac. However, instead of using the Control key, they use the Mac’s Command key, which bears either a cloverlike symbol or an Apple logo. So, on the Mac, for instance, Command-S is for Save.

Quitting programs: In Windows, you can quit a program by clicking on the red “X” in a square at the upper right corner of the window you’re using. But on the Mac, if you click on the equivalent button — a red “X” in a circle in the upper left corner — you are merely closing the window, not quitting the program. To quit the program, you must either select Quit from the leftmost menu or press the Command and “Q” keys together.

Maximizing windows: When you click on the blue maximize button in Windows XP, the window you are viewing occupies the whole screen. In Leopard, the equivalent button — a green circle at the upper left — increases a small window’s size to a footprint deemed optimal for its contents, which isn’t always the whole screen.

Switching programs: One common way to switch among running programs in Windows XP is to press Alt and Tab together. This displays icons of each running program and allows you to switch among them. On a Mac, the same trick can be performed by pressing the Command and Tab keys together. The Mac also has a terrific feature called Expose, which shows every open window at once, in miniature form, so you can navigate among them. You can trigger Expose in a number of ways, but the most common is to hit either the F9 key or the dedicated Expose key, depending on your Mac model.

Right-clicking: Contrary to common belief, the Mac has a right-click menu function, just like Windows. Most desktop Macs now come with a mouse that allows right-clicking, and you can use almost any two-button USB mouse with any modern Mac. If you are using a Mac laptop, which has only one button under the track pad, you can simulate a right-click by either holding down the Control key when you click, or by placing two fingers on the track pad while clicking. The latter technique, which I favor, must first be turned on in System Preferences.

Screen: Your desktop picture and screen saver on a Mac are set via a System Preference called Desktop & Screen Saver. Screen resolution is set in the Displays System Preference. In Windows XP, all of these things are included in the Display control panel.

For more information, Apple offers two Web sites. One is called Mac 101, and is at apple.com/support/mac101. The other is called Switch 101, and is at apple.com/support/switch101.

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  • Walter,

    My father (age=87) thinks you are a god. Maybe, just maybe, he might switch.

    ,dave
  • Sweet article. Can I recommend mentioning Spotlight though? It's a very, very useful feature of the OS, especially for those that have already used Vista's search bar in the Start menu.
  • Brandon Heart
    If you are lucky enough to live close to an Apple store, they offer a great program called One to One, which is personal training. For just $99 a year you can come in up to once a week for training on your Mac. My neighbor just got her first Mac and it's amazing what she has learned so far. She says that the trainers are very patient and make the lessons on what she wants to do with her laptop. She hardly calls me anymore with computer questions. It's a bargain!
  • RON NORRIS
    I would not be without Smart Scroll on my Mac.

    http://marcmoini.com/sx_en.html
  • Mac users may not be as scarce as one might think. A recent survey claims that Apple owns 80% of the market for "premium PC's," which the survey defines as PC's costing more than $1000. This figure is much more in line with observed reality than the miniscule number that is usually quoted.
  • David Miers
    I thought it worth adding the dock also shows all open programs, not just favorites. Any program that is open has a blue dot under it. Any program that is open but not saved to the dock can be easily added at the time by right clicking. The dock icons also provide a quick and easy way to quit programs by simply right clicking them. On a single button old fashioned mac mouse righting clicking functionality is added by holding the "control" key as you click.

    When you purchase a mac it will likely come with a Mighty mouse. In system preferences/keyboard & mouse/mouse you can choose to have the top button, or side buttons, run the app switcher. So with a single click you can choose the program of your choice that is running. Even though the option is not available with a standard pc mouse, the app switcher will continue to function from the top wheel if originally set with a mighty mouse. This is the same function that is accessed with the command + tab keys, just easier many times. While your in mouse preferences be sure to turn on the right click as default setting have both right and left click as primary, change the right to secondary. The mighty mouse does not appear to have 2 buttons for right and left click, but it does angle depending on which side of the mouse you push.

    One last very important tip is the firewall in mac OS X is not on by default when shipped. You need to go to system preferences/security/firewall to change this.

    As far as Mac users switching to Windows..lol..we don't lose many!
  • Kelley Sipsey
    I am a long.... time PC user and purchased the new iMac in January. LOVE IT!!!! You could not pay me to switch back. I am still learning with "One to One" but absolutely love it. It is easy to use and I LOVE the parental control options that it offers. I no longer worry about my kids finding sites that they should not be on. The Spotlight feature is fantastic too. I also really like Finder with the "Cover Flow" option that you can see the file or document before you open it. I am working on converting several friends too. They have seen it and really like it.
  • One argument I often hear from Windows people is that menus belong to an application so should be in the window. This is logical programmer's thinking, but Apple thinks different. Well for one thing that wastes screen space because every window requires menu space. But there is a much more fundamental reason - Mac menus are much faster for the user. It's called Fitts' Law and is expounded by Bruce Tognazzini at: http://www.asktog.com/basics/firstPrinciples.ht...

    What this means is that an object (the menu) at the top of the screen is infinitely big in the up direction. Thus a user needs only flick the mouse upwards and has an easy-to-hit target. In Windows, the user must carefully position the mouse over the menu before clicking. The claim (backed by some tests) is that Mac users are five times faster hitting menus than Windows users. It is probably why Windows users much more rely on so-called keyboard shortcuts, which aren't even shortcuts compared to the shortcuts on the Mac.

    Ian
  • Allan Sherman
    I switched last December. My concern at the time was the learning curve after using Windows all my life (I'm 64). Within hours I was up and running and had no problems what so ever. I believe that the iMac I purchased was one of the best investments I have made and even today it still amazes me.
  • John Smith
    One thing I miss from Windows is the ability to change a window size from any edge; Is there a Mac add on for this?

    And how can I set up short cut keys for arbitrary menu items, (such as "add a link")??

    And, can you get a "back" button for Safari on the MightyMouse!

    I was Mac since 84, till PC's drove their way in through the 90"s. Been stuck with a Thinkpad for a while, but just got my MBA, and it is a marvel of engineering all around.
  • Doreen L. Culligan
    I just took the plunge and made the switch exactly one month ago today. Being sensible, and having a severe aversion to "Buyer's Remorse," I did about 5 months of researching whether to buy a new PC or switch over to a Mac. I have been PC since the days when Winblows ran in DOS, but I could not bring myself to run Microsoft's latest piece of vaporware on anything I would ever own.
    I absolutely LOVE my iMac. I am continually amazed by the engineering and quality inherent in every aspect of my Mac, and I am equally impressed with its aesthetically pleasing appearance. The ONLY regret I have is not switching over sooner!
  • William Stasior
    I have a Macbook and love many things about it but haven't been able to switch away from Windows as my main OS because of email search. In particular, the Mac does not seem to adequately support searching attachments. Vista/Outlook does this very well but the only solutions I've seen for the Mac are kludgy and inconvenient at best.

    It's rather strange that the Mac appears so inferior in this respect because generally speaking, desktop search via spotlight is one of the Mac's strengths. If anybody knows of a simple solution that allows one to search through their email, including the text within attachments, I would love to see it.
  • ralph mocha
    I have a tip for Apple. Update the Mac mini soon. There are a lot of "switchers" waiting.
  • Bob Kins
    William Stasior

    Regarding searching through your mail and attatchments, have you tried spotlight? I am pretty sure it will crawl into the content of your files on your disk, including attachments. I don't believe mail's internal find does that.
  • Ben Rosenthal
    In addition to Spotlight, which I believe is easily faster for opening applications than clicking through Start > Programs, you also didn't mention the status menus on the right side of the menubar. These are equivalent to icons in Windows' System Tray on the right side of the Task Bar.

    Finally, in addition to the Dock, the Apple menu, and Spotlight, the Mac simplifies file/program opening by making them easily accessible in the Finder via the Go menu.
  • yvonne schram
    I wanted to buy a laptop and did not want to buy one with Vista on it...and on one day I thought 'I will buy a Mac". I am really happy with my MacbookPro The only thing that i miss is a spellingcontrole (e-mail and Pages) in different languages.
    I need that for my study Spanish. I don't want to buy Microsoft Word for Mac as i don't want to put any Microsoft stuff on my laptop. Nevertheless, I like the laptop a lot!!!
  • Saint Seminole
    These sound like some healthy tips... I constantly have close friends and family trying to get me to switch to a Mac.

    "You'll love the Dock!" they say. (I already have a dock in Windows, called RocketDock; it works fine).

    "You'll love that it doesn't crash!" (My Windows doesn't crash)

    "Safari is great!" (I already used Safari on Windows; didn't like it)

    But I'll be sure and head back this way if I ever decide to switch.
  • japie jopie
    just a few basic essentials I think should be mentioned:

    A very quick and handy way to run an app: Press Command-spacebar, type the first few letters of the app's name, press return.

    My lifeline on the mac. Something I really could not live without: Exposé. I've set it to two active corners on the screen. It's genius!

    And to Yvonne: The beautiful thing about mac is that it has spell and grammar check in any language you want built in by default! Unlike Microsoft, where your OS is only in one language and stuff like Word, you buy one language version and then have to buy additional proofing tools for other languages. Talk about expensive..
    How to use it on a mac: e.g. in Mail, just go to Edit >> spelling and grammar >> Show spelling and grammar >> on the bottom of the popup window, there's a drop down list with any language you like.
    Also you can change the language of the whole OS from system preferences, without even restarting the computer.
  • japie jopie
    Oh and another thing. Walt, regarding keyboard shortcuts, you could have mentioned, that Apple came up with those in the first place. Microsoft took that from the Mac OS, not the other way around.
  • demetria warren
    I switched from pc to Mac a couple of months ago and I am so loving it!!! I have gone through a few pc's and laptops and when the last one failed me during a paper, I decided that I would spend the money for a macbook and forget about pc's. I have NO regrets on that decision!!!! I love it and I love to see other people sitting in starbucks or borders on theirs...if i have questions i can go to them for help...i just helped another mac user the other day!!!
  • axel cooper
    love the article
    just need to say that since i've been using MAC my workflow has become 100 times faster to a point that the other day i got all my work done in less than 2 hours and then spent 20 minutes walking around my room because i had nothing to do, i'd never finished my work so fast on a windows in order to have spare time. if every one switched to MAC the information flow on this planet would quadruple if not more.

    one thing that is really worth mentioning and personal at the same time is that i am a dyslexic and cant spell to save my life, but with a MAC i'll never have to worry about that again, because in ANY text field on any program its got a spell checker and i think thats just AMAZING. thats besides the 10000 useful everyday features.
  • Spotlight: if you can't actually remember the name of the application you want, or where you put it, type into Spotlight "kind:app" and it will list all your applications.
  • Travis Hutchinson
    I use a macbook, and the two button scroll is in itself a reason to buy an apple laptop. When using windows laptops I keep forgetting that I can't do a two finger scroll or use the shortcuts. After using a mac for seven months, I can never go back. Same goes for Iwork 08 over word and powerpoint.

    here's a hint for anyone who has iwork 08 but is disappointed in lack of clip art, my macbook came with a trial version of office, I just copied all of the clip art that came with it and when the trial version expired, I lost the programs but was able to keep the clip art
  • Steve Smith
    You can find an excellent free switchers tutorial at MacProVideo, as well as other quality video tutorials... Highly recommended!

    http://www.macprovideo.com/tutorial/xpToLeopard
  • axel cooper
    to : Saint Seminole, about windows so called "dock"
    and so called "not crashing" yea have a windows OS that NEVER crashed, its the windows DVD its been on my shelf for years now and its never crashed at all lolllllllllllllll,

    here is one simple reason why MAC is just simple UltraSuperior, i have a 4- inch monitor and a 19 inch on the side, i use Expose and have 2 Row's and 3 columns set up while running Photoshop, Aperture, Vuze, Iphoto, Yahoo messenger, Mail, iTunes, and at least 3 Finder windows at any given time

    and i they ALL run smooth as silk.
    if u even thought of doing that on a windows machine i honestly think it would explode or something.

    and this is the first time i use most of the keyboard for once i am actually using the F1 through F12 key's i all ways thought they never did anything on windows for the end user.

    iLife, iwork, Finder, Dock, Expose, Mail, they can run your social and professional life on your MAC no questions asked, you will never need anything else.
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