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For example, to view all of the ssh shares on Bonjour-enabled computers, try this in the Terminal (replace dns-sd with mDNS if you're on 10.3): You should receive a list of workstations that are broadcasting ssh services via Bonjour. Don't forget that you need to replace the spaces with hyphens and add a .local prefix when trying to connect. For example, to ssh to Macintosh HD found this way, you need to use ssh Macintosh-HD.local. To view AFP shares (maybe AppleTalk isn't turned on?), try this one: This page lists more of the potential services you might be able to find. And, as always, you can read the man pages for more help (in 10.4, at least) -- man dns-sd has a few pages of content.
Ever have a problem on your Mac, where you can't type the letters and numbers 7, 8, 9, U, I, O, J, K, L, and M—and maybe some others?
Turn on your Mac and continue to press and hold the power button until you see the startup options window. Click the gear icon labeled Options, then click Continue. Locate the following keys on the keyboard: Command (⌘), Option, P, and R. Turn on your Mac. Press and hold the Command-Option-P-R keys immediately after you hear the startup sound. Hold these keys until the computer restarts and you hear the startup sound for a second time. Dieter Bohn lists six menu bar utilities for the Mac that supercharge how you'll use it every day. Customizing your computer can make you feel more empowered, and these window managers. WikiHow is a 'wiki,' similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, 10 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time.
It's probably Mouse Keys at play, an accessibility feature in macOS that mimics an old IBM-style keypad feature.
Num Lock and its computer history
Keyboards still have vestiges of their origins on typewriters and mechanical calculators. We mostly ignore those in our day-to-day work. The Shift key, originally meant to literally raise a set of typebars in a typewriter, merely shifts among upper and lower case. And you know better than to press Caps Lock when entering passwords—Apple even alerts you when you have it accidentally enabled.
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The Num Lock key was a product of the intermediate age, where mechanical and digital met. Some IBM computer keyboards didn't have separate arrow keys, but they did have a numeric keypad for fast number entry. IBM doubled up: It added a Num Lock key that flipped the numeric keypad to act as arrow keys to move a cursor around a screen-based interface, before computer mouses.
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On certain laptops, including older Macs, Num Lock had a different function. Lacking a numeric keypad, Num Lock turned part of the main keyboard into a pseudo-keypad. (There was sometimes a unique Num Lock key, sometimes it doubled with a Clear key and Shift, and sometimes it was a function to invoke, like through F6 on a Mac.)
The pseudo-keypad layout relied on sets of four keys starting with 7, 8, 9, 0 and going down three rows to M. With this mode invoked, you could still type 7, 8, 9, and 0 and have those characters appear, as they're still mapped to the same position. But U, I, O, P, J, K, l, semicolon, M, command, period, slash take on keypad functions.
Num Lock and its computer history
Keyboards still have vestiges of their origins on typewriters and mechanical calculators. We mostly ignore those in our day-to-day work. The Shift key, originally meant to literally raise a set of typebars in a typewriter, merely shifts among upper and lower case. And you know better than to press Caps Lock when entering passwords—Apple even alerts you when you have it accidentally enabled.
Don't Push Me Armadillo Mac Os 8
The Num Lock key was a product of the intermediate age, where mechanical and digital met. Some IBM computer keyboards didn't have separate arrow keys, but they did have a numeric keypad for fast number entry. IBM doubled up: It added a Num Lock key that flipped the numeric keypad to act as arrow keys to move a cursor around a screen-based interface, before computer mouses.
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On certain laptops, including older Macs, Num Lock had a different function. Lacking a numeric keypad, Num Lock turned part of the main keyboard into a pseudo-keypad. (There was sometimes a unique Num Lock key, sometimes it doubled with a Clear key and Shift, and sometimes it was a function to invoke, like through F6 on a Mac.)
The pseudo-keypad layout relied on sets of four keys starting with 7, 8, 9, 0 and going down three rows to M. With this mode invoked, you could still type 7, 8, 9, and 0 and have those characters appear, as they're still mapped to the same position. But U, I, O, P, J, K, l, semicolon, M, command, period, slash take on keypad functions.
Apple stopped supporting Num Lock via F6 quietly back in 2008. It shouldn't be possible to invoke this mode accidentally, as it shouldn't exist. It's available in Boot Camp with some laptops, although Apple doesn't specify which.
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An independent developer did create a Num Lock app—called simply NumLock—that would invoke the feature within Mac OS X; it hasn't been updated in a few years, and I haven't tested it in Mojave.
Mouse Keys and its modern usage
Apple lets you hearken back to those IBM days with an accessibility feature in macOS called Mouse Keys. With Mouse Keys enabled in the Accessibility preference pane in the Mouse & Trackpad section, the number keys on a keypad turn into cursor diagonal, left, right, up, and down cursor movement in tiny increments—or hold down and it moves faster. To click the mouse, press 5; to click and hold, press 0; to release, press the dot on the keypad.
However, if you're using a laptop or a keyboard without a keypad, Mouse Keys hijacks a subset of that old IBM layout. 7, 8, 9, I, O, P, J, K, L, M, and period are turned into the same layout as a keypad (789/456/123/0.).
One Macworld reader has found that a keyboard they plugged in invoked Mouse Keys even though they didn't know it was turned on. You can disable Mouse Keys via the Accessibility preference pane, but if you haven't changed defaults, you can also tap the Option key five times and an onscreen accessibility message appears briefly noting it's turned off. You can similarly re-enable it the same way.
This Mac 911 article is in response to a question submitted by Macworld reader Trang.
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