Enabling Auto Spelling Correction in Snow Leopard
In Snow Leopard, the automatic spelling correction in applications is not usually activated by default. To turn it on, make sure the cursor's insertion point is somewhere where text can be entered, and either choose Edit > Spelling and Grammar > Correct Spelling Automatically or, if the Edit menu's submenu doesn't have what you need, Control-click where you're typing and choose Spelling and Grammar > Correct Spelling Automatically from the contextual menu that appears. The latter approach is particularly likely to be necessary in Safari and other WebKit-based applications, like Mailplane.
Submitted by
Doug McLean
Recent TidBITS Talk Discussions
- iPhone Radio Interference (10 messages)
- Reconstructing a mirrored RAID (1 message)
- The iPhone & Windows/Outlook (1 message)
- Deciding how to configure a new MacBook Pro (1 message)
Published in TidBITS 961.
Subscribe to our weekly email edition.
- Steve Jobs Takes Medical Leave Until June
- Protect Yourself From the Safari RSS Vulnerability
- A Request for Tristan's 10th Birthday
- Caffeine Helps Video-Playing Macs Stay Awake
- Macworld Expo 2009 for Photographers
- Converting from Now Up-to-Date to iCal and BusySync
- Easy Now Up-to-Date to iCal Imports
- Incase Power Slider for iPhone 3G Reviewed
- TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 19-Jan-09
- ExtraBITS for 19-Jan-09
- Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 19-Jan-09
Talking Moose Joins Twitter
I make a practice of scanning the names of people who follow me on Twitter, just to get a sense of who reads what I write. So I was amused to see among them a blast from the past: the Talking Moose.
For those whose Macintosh experience doesn't extend back to the mid-1980s, the Talking Moose was a bit of background software that would periodically pop up, in the form of an animated moose reminiscent of Bullwinkle, and offer witticisms via the MacinTalk speech synthesis software. Created by Steven Halls in 1986, the Talking Moose became popular for a few years, thanks in part to being distributed with Bob "Dr. Mac" LeVitus's "Stupid Mac Tricks" book in 1989 before fading into obscurity. It was resurrected in 1992 by Uli Kusterer and later brought forward to Mac OS X.
If the concept of a wisecracking moose constantly interrupting you seems, well, hokey, keep in mind that this was before most computer users had access to anything resembling today's Internet and were thus in dire need of constant distraction from the existential angst of everyday life. The question is, will the Talking Moose's oddball sayings stand out from what normally flows through Twitter?
CrashPlan is easy, secure backup that works everywhere. Back upto your own drives, computers, and online with unlimited storage.
With unlimited online backup, this is one resolution you can keep.
Back Up Your Life Today! <http://crashplan.com/ref/tidbits.html>

