Hi Allan and Marta,

Your control strip modules are more analogous to plug-ins instead of 
drivers.  It should be relatively easy to determine whether a piece of 
software is a control strip module.  Performing a "Get Info" on the 
file in question or just drag in on top of your System Folder and let 
the system tell you what it is.

The format for writing Control strip modules is predetermined by Apple 
but these can be written by any third party software vendor.  Marta, if 
you wish to launch any applications or files with the convenience of a 
control strip module, you may want to check out using the Launcher.  
And for those who despise using the Launcher, one may also group all of 
their important aliases together in a folder on their hard disk, open 
that folder, then proceed to drag that open window to the base of their 
screen thus creating a pop-up tab.  You can further tweak this by 
making those items "buttons' for convenient single click operation.

Ward Oldham


On Monday, November 18, 2002, at 10:22  AM, Allan Atherton wrote:

> Mledie at aol.com wrote:
>> Hi, Allan,
>> no, they are not modules with a tab.  Those are the ones already in 
>> the
>> folder. I can manipulate those. What I would like to do is put some 
>> other, for
>> instance my Acrobat Reader down ... can I determine in some way, 
>> whether any
>> application is control strip ready ? Who decides which applications 
>> etc. are in
>> the module folder ? Why is my Antivirus in there, why I-Tunes? Why 
>> keychain
>> etc? Why not DataViz , Retrospect , Stuffit Expander  etc? - Have the
>> controlstrip modules been predetermined by Apple ?
>
> Good question. I did not realize so many things could be put in the 
> control
> strip. After what you said, I think it must be like drivers. Someone 
> has to
> write a control strip module for an application to work out of the 
> control
> strip.
> Allan Atherton
>
>
> The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will be November 26
> For more information, see <http://www.aye.net/~lcs>. A calendar of
> activities is at <http://www.calsnet.net/macusers>.
>


The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will be November 26
For more information, see <http://www.aye.net/~lcs>. A calendar of
activities is at <http://www.calsnet.net/macusers>.


Reply via email to