Hi, Bill

Copy the application file to your apps directory, so you will be able to find 
it later. Then go to the application directory and use command-down-arrow to 
open the file. You can continue to open it this way, or you can place it in the 
dock for faster access by doing the following: When you have the file open, it 
will show up in the dock. Go to the dock and find it, press shift-VO-m for the 
contextual menu, go into the options submenu, and choose "keep in dock". All of 
this applies to any application files with a .app extension, or files that 
indicate they are applications. Sometimes in dmg files, you will find an 
installer, which will be clearly indicated. You can open the installers right 
from the dmg file, do the install, then delete the dmg file or archive it 
somewhere if you want to keep it.

HTH,
Teresa

"The Golden Age of science fiction is twelve."--Pete Graham

On Feb 10, 2012, at 11:40 AM, Bill Holton wrote:

> OK, feeling stupid here.  I have the chrome dmg file opened on my desktop.  I 
> opened the dmg and there are two files, google chrome, selected application 
> and space, alias.  No matter how I try to open the google chrome file I can’t 
> get it to do anything.  Tried Command O, spacebar, VO spacebar, Shift VO 
> spacebar, even clicking the physical mouse.  What am I doing wrong?
> Thanks.
>  
> 
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