Whether you're a die-hard Windows fan or simply a Mac user required to occasionally use Windows, it's hard to argue against the fact that Mac OS X has some killer features. OS Specific Fonts in CSS By Chris Coyier On December 7, 2014 webfont I'm not sure what the exact use case was, but Sam Stephenson recently asked me.

Been using my Mac now for a few years and been happy with it.but I just switched to a 26' 4k monitor and I now find the vast distance between my window position (say bottom right) and the menu bar (top left) makes the positioning of the Menu bar to be not very useful. It's fine on a standard display but I just find there is too much real estate to traverse with your mouse to use a menu bar item. So 2 questions really.

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Is there a way(an add-on) that would stick my menu bar to the window it pertains to (same way as Windows does) 2. Any way to get the menu bar to pop-up next to your mouse with some arcane key-stroke I did have a search but found noting. Any menu bar addons i found I also wasnt certain they would do what i wanted. Any and all help gratefully received. The Menu Bar and other screen interface design features have always been designed like it is from all the way back to the introduction of Macintosh in 1984. There is nothing out there that will modify this OS design feature of how the Menu Bar is designed,placed and how it works. It is designed the way it is to always be there and available to any application, all the time.

You either change the screen resolution to something a little less fine to increase the size of the menu bar and other screen elements and decrease the distance to the Menu Bar and/or try speeding up your mouse cursor so it doesn't take so long for the cursor and your mouse to traverse the screen. Since the main Finder menu bar and screen is part of the Mac OS X, other than using some dozens of Apple keyboard shortcuts to access window menus, there's little else. For users with dual displays, they could choose to use a small display for accessing the main Finder and applications windows and a second display for the larger view. I've heard of people doing things like that, for a variety of reasons.

Also there had been (in prior OS X) third-party Dock applications that could place a second Dock in other window locations, or in a second display, such as in Extended Desktop view. The Menu Bar and other screen interface design features have always been designed like it is from all the way back to the introduction of Macintosh in 1984.

There is nothing out there that will modify this OS design feature of how the Menu Bar is designed,placed and how it works. It is designed the way it is to always be there and available to any application, all the time. You either change the screen resolution to something a little less fine to increase the size of the menu bar and other screen elements and decrease the distance to the Menu Bar and/or try speeding up your mouse cursor so it doesn't take so long for the cursor and your mouse to traverse the screen. Since the main Finder menu bar and screen is part of the Mac OS X, other than using some dozens of Apple keyboard shortcuts to access window menus, there's little else.

Windows

Word for mac. For users with dual displays, they could choose to use a small display for accessing the main Finder and applications windows and a second display for the larger view. I've heard of people doing things like that, for a variety of reasons. Also there had been (in prior OS X) third-party Dock applications that could place a second Dock in other window locations, or in a second display, such as in Extended Desktop view.

Rather than hacking the system, learn to use OS X as it's designed. The big difference is that you don't have to do anywhere near as much mousing or keystrokes with the Mac OS.