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Mac OS X Lion: The Missing Manual
book

Mac OS X Lion: The Missing Manual

by David Pogue
October 2011
Intermediate to advanced
928 pages
34h 56m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Mac OS X Lion: The Missing Manual

DVD Movies

Watching movies on your Mac screen couldn’t be simpler: Just insert a movie DVD. The Mac detects that it’s a video DVD (as opposed to, say, one that’s just filled with files). Then, unless you’ve fiddled with your preference settings, the DVD Player program opens and begins playing the movie in full-screen mode. (Even the menu bar disappears. To make it reappear, move your cursor to near the top of the screen.)

Note

If DVD Player doesn’t open automatically when you insert a DVD movie, you can open it yourself. It’s sitting there in your Applications folder. (Then fix the problem, using the CDs & DVDs panel of System Preferences.)

Playing a Movie

Once DVD Player starts playing your movie, you can move your mouse to the bottom of the screen, at any time, to bring up the control bar, which is deconstructed in Figure 11-10.

Or just use the keyboard controls, which appear here in this clip ’n’ save cheat sheet:

Function

Keystroke

Play, Pause

space bar

Fast-forward, rewind

Shift-⌘-→, Shift-⌘-← (press repeatedly to cycle to 3, 8, 16, and 32 times normal speed)

Skip forward/back 5 seconds

Option-⌘-→, Option-⌘-←

Louder, quieter

⌘-↑, ⌘-↓.

Mute/Unmute

Option-⌘-↓.

Next/previous “chapter”

→, ←

Full-screen mode on/off

⌘-F

Half, normal, maximum size

⌘-1, ⌘-2, ⌘-3

Eject

⌘-E

Add a bookmark

⌘-= (equal sign)

Top: Even in full-screen mode, you can control the playback and navigate the disc using the new, translucent, pop-up control bar.One especially cool feature is the new Player Settings button. It opens the Zoom controls window shown here, which gives you manual control over the width and height of the picture on your screen.Don’t miss the scrubber bar at the very bottom, either. It lets you scroll directly to any spot in the DVD.Bottom: When you’re not in full-screen mode, you get a separate, floating “remote control.” It has most of the same controls, but they’re arranged with a more 1999 sort of design aesthetic.

Figure 11-10. Top: Even in full-screen mode, you can control the playback and navigate the disc using the new, ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9781449314828Errata Page