Doesn't do anything. I assume by Apple Key you mean the command key on either side of the space bar. I even tried the right one, like in Closed-Apple versus Open-Apple. I never use the Closed-Apple key. They use to have different functions and it wasn't until a year or so ago I found out they now were the same. I've forgotten what they use to do. Open Apple-C copied; but I've forgotten all the Closed-Apple commands.
I'm using an Apple Keyboard with an iMac (3.4 Ghz Intel Core i7) running Mountain Lion (also known to biologists as Puma). Safari 6.1.2 Anne On Mar 6, 2014, at 3:22 PM, John Robinson <[email protected]> wrote: > Ann, > > Top graphic shows the site, second graphic shows the path of the site. > Holding down on the Apple key then clicking the mouse will show you the path. > You should be able to tell where you site resides….is this what you are > asking? Click on the VERY top line, in this case the gray line that reads “US > Treasury Bond Futures Quotes-CME Group > > John > > > > <PastedGraphic-2.png> > > > > > > <PastedGraphic-1.png> > On Mar 6, 2014, at 3:12 PM, Anne Cartwright <[email protected]> wrote: > >> >> On Mar 6, 2014, at 2:26 PM, Lee Larson <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> I think I see why you're having a problem. If you hold down the command key >>> (, ⌘, splat, whatever) and click the title bar of the Safari window, it >>> will show you the whole URL. There's also the awkward ⌘LCV — do it with one >>> hand, if you can. >> >> >> Holding down the Command key and clicking on the title bar of the Safari >> window or anywhere else on the Safari window does nothing. >> Command-LCV, which I can't do with one hand, puts the email address of a >> friend who has no L or C or V in it. Also there is no website with their >> email address. >> >>> >>> When I go to https://www.yewdellgardens.org, I get a secure connection with >>> 128-bit encryption for much of the page >> >> How do you tell that it is a secure connection with 128-bit encryption? >> >> >> Anne >> >> >> >>> , but some of the pictures on the page, which may come from another server, >>> are not encrypted. Other browsers — perhaps even older versions of Safari — >>> flag a page as encrypted, if there was a valid encryption certificate >>> associated with it. It looks like Apple has tightened that up with newer >>> versions of Safari and maybe it doesn't show the page as encrypted if there >>> are any non-encrypted resources on the page. >>> >>> I just tried it with Chrome and got a lock with a caution sign on it, so I >>> guess Chrome has a middle ground — which I like better. >>> >>> I just tried Firefox — under Linux — and it also has a caution sign — >>> again, a better solution than that of Safari. >>> >>> I don’t have an older version of Safari with which to try it. >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> MacGroup mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> MacGroup mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup > > > _______________________________________________ > MacGroup mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup
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