Designing Your Desktop
In some ways, just buying a Macintosh was already a renegade act of self-expression. But that’s only the beginning. Now it’s time to fashion the computer screen itself according to your personal sense of design and fashion.
System Preferences
Cosmetically speaking, OS X offers two dramatic full-screen features: desktop backgrounds and screensavers. For details, see Chapter 9.
Graphic Designers’ Corner: The Gray Look
One of the earliest objections to the lively, brightly colored look of OS X came from Apple’s core constituency: artists and graphic designers. Some complained that OS X’s bright blues (of scroll-bar handles, progress bars, the
menu, pulsing OK buttons, and highlighted menu names and commands), along with the red, green, and yellow window-corner buttons, threw off their color judgment.
Apple has been de-colorizing OS X ever since. The three-dimensional effects are less drastic, and the button colors are less intense. In Snow Leopard, both the
menu and the Spotlight menu went from colorful to black, and in Lion, the Sidebar lost its color. In Yosemite, OK buttons no longer pulse.
Tip
The Highlight Color pop-up menu lets you choose a different accent color for your Mac world. This is the background color of highlighted text, the colored oval that appears ...
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