The new Twitter for Mac app that debuted with the Mac App Store has a great feature that allows the user to Tweet almost anything with just a right click in many OS X apps.
What is Twitter? Per Wiki: Twitter is an American microblogging and social networking service on which users post and interact with messages known as 'tweets'.Registered users can post, like, and retweet tweets, but unregistered users can only read them. Users access Twitter through its website interface or its mobile-device application software ('app'), though the service could also be. Here is what you’ll want to do: Open the Twitter for Mac app if you aren’t there already, and pull down the “Twitter menu”. Go to Preferences then choose the “General” tab. Uncheck the box next to “Video Autoplay” then close out of Preferences. Among so many audiobook vendors, Audible.com is always the first choice for audiobook lovers because of the 180,000 titles, the great narrators and big discounts. As a coin has two sides, you will also find the Audible audiobooks are protected by Audible DRM as well as in AA or AAX format which only can be played on some particular players.
We first discovered this feature thanks to a post at MacStories. The way it works, once installed, Twitter inserts the Tweet command into the right click context menu of almost any application on your system.
Tweet Lovers Mac Os Catalina
Tweet Lovers Mac Os X
For example, if you want to tweet the URL of this article, highlight it and right click it and choose Tweet.
Unfortunately it doesn’t shorten the URL. This could be handy if you find a quote on a web page or in some other application that you wish to send out to your Twitter followers.
The command doesn’t work in most of the non-Apple apps that I tested, nor did it work in Pages. But it did work in Text Edit and the Dictionary app.
Tweet Lovers Mac Os Download
Related Posts
Tweet Lovers Mac Os 11
- Spaced out (petersome) mac os. Here is a guide on how to detect Mac malware and safely remove it from…
- With recent updates to the Mac's OS X El Capitan, and the new iOS 9.3,…
- Like on a PC, most of your Mac's software lives in the same place on…