![]() ![]() Yosemite introduced a major overhaul of OS X's user interface, emphasizing flat graphic design over skeuomorphism, following the aesthetic introduced with iOS 7. It is the first major redesign of the OS X user interface since 10.5 Leopard. Other changes include thinner fonts and blurred translucency effects. Some icons have been changed to correspond with those of iOS 7 and iOS 8. Yosemite maintains the OS X desktop metaphor. Other design changes include new icons, light and dark color schemes, and the replacement of Lucida Grande with Helvetica Neue as the default system typeface. It was the only macOS version to use Helvetica Neue as the default typeface, as in El Capitan it was again changed, this time to Apple's own, newly-designed San Francisco typeface. The Dock is now a 2D translucent rectangle instead of a skeuomorphic glass shelf, reminiscent of the Dock design used in early versions of OS X through Tiger and in iOS since iOS 7. Logging in to evernote website addressed this issue with webclipper. I can see the webclipper login and out realtime(the dot disappears and reappears), by simply logging in and out of evernote website.Īfter tracing back steps, I realized that the webclipper started logging out after I had chose NOT to persist cookie/auth for website login, by not selecting remember me on website login. ![]() I out of habit tend not to persist website logins. But I guess if I am ok with website clipper staying logged in, I should be ok with evernote website staying logged in as well. UX Feedback for Evernote: If you are tying the same cookie and auth session to webclipper extension and general website at least be consistent. ![]() If I log in to webclipper, provide some indication of persisting the session and updating the cookie. It seems to be one way now where the website auth persistance overrides the webclipper, but not the other way around. I doubt the average user is going to even consider the auth session persistance between what seem like two separate "apps": the clipper and the website. Sorry, but I'm stunned that not only did this horribly broken web clipper release make it out of dev, it made it out of QA, made it to staging, and then - beyond belief - into production where millions (maybe?) of people's browser's happily autoupdated to it, and people got locked out of using webclipper thenceforth. Thankfully, when this cropped up for me in firefox, I simply clicked through to the reviews for the addon, and a nice person had posted a link to a release a couple of revs back. ![]() Here are four ways to make any Windows 10 app launch at startup: Advertisement Contents (Click me) 1. Add it to the current user's Startup folder.This requires the least permissions for your app to run, and gives the user the most control and feedback of what's going on.Ĭheck the settings of the app that you want to run at Windows 10 startup 2. ECHO OFF PowerShell.exe -Command 'C:Reminder-ScriptsMilkBuy-Milk.ps1' PAUSE. The down-side is it's a little more difficult determining whether to show the checkbox already checked next time they view that screen in your program. Create a Scheduled Task that triggers on User Login.Īdd it to the HKey_Current_User\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run registry key.What this batch files does is that it opens PowerShell and then runs the script that you’ve pointed it to.Add it to the HKey_Local_Machine\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run registry key. The only problem here is it requires write access to the registry, which isn't always available. Only do this if you really mean it, and you know for sure you want to run this program for all users on the computer. Since I wrote this, Windows 10 was released, which changes how the Start Menu folders work. It's not yet clear to me how easy it is to just add or remove a file in that folder without also referencing the internal database Windows uses for these locations. ![]()
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