![]() This is all controlled from a new Repair palette. Outside of silence, I’d also rather keep the CMP on Mojave which is a much more stable and reliable operating system than Big Sur. DxO PhotoLab 3 introduces a redesigned Repair tool, now allowing you to choose the source of your repair point, adjust the feathering and opacity of the repair, and switch between repair and traditional cloning. Otherwise, I’d go back to running PhotoLab 5 on the Intel Classic Mac Pro. The M1 Mac Mini is really and truly silent even under load. I’ve been building “silent PC’s” and silent Macs for decades now and it’s always been a compromise. My interest in the M1 Mac Mini is it’s the first silent under load computer which I’ve had. PhotoLab 5 works much better under Big Sur on my Intel Classic Mac Pro with a WX7100 and 96 GB of memory (requires OpenCore and a fair amount of tweaking to run Big Sur on a Classic Mac Pro). PhotoLab 4 works much better under Mojave on my Intel Classic Mac Pro with a WX7100 and 96 GB of memory. ![]() While editing, PhotoLab runs fine but I’m not astonished by its power or how agile it is. The M1 Mac Mini more or less completely seizes up while exporting Nikon NEF files with DeepPrime. Keep in mind that I wrote “reasonably well”. The same technique can be applied with the built-in Activity Monitor. I’m running a utility called iStat Menus which allows me to monitor memory (system and PhotoLab) very easily. Thanks to the very fast SSD speeds of an M1 Mac Mini, opening and closing PhotoLab is not that big a deal. I then quit and reopen PL5 after any significant amount of work, particularly an export. The way I make PL5 run reasonably well on an 8GB M1 Mac Mini is to close almost all applications including browsers (or at least all windows) before opening up PhotoLab (this process is a nuisance and costs productivity). I’m struggling with an 8 GB M1 Mac Mini myself for now but will probably exchange it for the 16 GB version (got a very good deal on the 8 GB version and will not have any deal on the 16 GB version, it’s not just the book price difference). What settings are you using in PL5 to make it go faster
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![]() ![]() Next, click OK.īack in your document, type nme and press the spacebar: You should see “Needs more explanation” appear automatically. In the pop-up window that appears, under ‘Automatic substitution’, type nme below the ‘Replace’ heading and Needs more explanation below the ‘With’ heading. To save time, go to Tools, Preferences from inside a text document in Google Docs. Let’s say you’re a teacher who constantly writes “Needs more explanation” in your students’ papers. If you want to move your text editing to the cloud, Google Docs provides a similar–but limited–function. Want to trim the number of Google Docs browser tabs? Compensate for the lack of a guided spelling checker? Create shortcuts for frequently used text? To make your overall editing experience a bit better, read on we also offer some tips that you can use with Google’s spreadsheet and presentation applications.ĭesktop text editors can use plug-ins and utilities, such as TextExpander for OS X and iOS, to autocomplete frequently repeated words and phrases, such as your professional title or an oft-used line of HTML. You might have to wait for its software wizards to make the big changes, but you can still apply a few workarounds and hidden features. Since launching Google Spreadsheets in 2006, Google has steadily improved Docs to support complex text documents, worksheets, tables, forms, and presentations. It’s also infuriating, incomplete, and limited. Google Docs wafts in the cloud, just beyond your tinkering fingertips, and you’re at the whim of the Google engineers who control the tweaks, fixes, and enhancements. Google Docs is convenient, cheap, and compatible with just about any platform, making collaboration incredibly simple. |
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