good advice. Thank you. I will stick with the native Mac apps for now.
Certainly, I have a lot to learn with them.
Best, Marlene
> On Jan 4, 2023, at 9:18 PM, 'Mary Ward' via MacVisionaries
> wrote:
>
> Y I agree that learning the apps that come with the Mac when you are a
> beginner is a
Y I agree that learning the apps that come with the Mac when you are a beginner
is a good idea. Learning those apps, get you through the basic use of your
computer. I also agree that when you do use third party apps, most of them will
be things you download from websites. But learn your basic
On 5/1/23 09:26, Marlene Kramer wrote:
are there recommended apps from the Mac store for the MacBook Air with which I
may not be familiar having come over from iOS?
It very much depends on what you want to do. Perhaps a visit to
applevis.com and a look at their reviews of Mac apps would be
Most apps you are likely to use will be third-party downloads. This really
depends on what you want to use your Mac for though. For instance, there are
some Twitter apps in the ap store, but Facebook and Youtube you’re using
Safari. Apps like Zoom you get from the website.
> On Jan 4, 2023, at
Well, AppleVis.com does a reasonable job of reviewing apps for accessibilit,
but every app has its own purpose and design paradigm and so may or may not be
accessible.
BBEdit is supposed to be a wonderful editor of text files, with lots of power
tools, but their text widget does not communicate
hi,
Mac newbie here, making slow but definite progress. I went to the AppStore
today for the first time, prompting the following question.
are there recommended apps from the Mac store for the MacBook Air with which I
may not be familiar having come over from iOS? I realize a question like this