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Quick, Look! It's Quick Look in Snow Leopard!


Colonel

In Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, Apple introduced a new technology called Quick Look, as fast and easy way to preview media, documents, and other files on your computer without having to open up an entire program to view their contents. QuickLook was available from Finder in CoverFlow mode, where you could click on the file in CoverFlow to preview it, in List Mode, you could view your the selected item by clicking it once, then clicking the icon in the sidebar to view a quick preview of it, or just by clicking a file and pressing the space bar.

 

Taking it one step further in the next version of Mac OS X, dubbed Snow Leopard, Apple is incorporating QuickLook into the file's icons themselves, making it even easier to preview your media without even having to open a program. When the user rolls the cursor over the desired file's icon, a gray triangle will appear. When clicked, the icon will show a full preview of its contents.

snowleopard0807211zu8.png

For other types of files such as Keynote presentations or Microsoft Word documents, QuickLook will allow you to flick through the pages and slides in the file without having to open up the respective application.

 

Yes, this will definitely be a nifty feature to have, but unless you've got your icons cranked up to the maximum size, it may pose as a bit of a challenge to preview your files in that tiny icon view. ;)

 

Snow Leopard is the next generation of Mac OS X and is due sometime in 2009.

 

Credits to AppleInsider for the find.


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Me likey. I also use Quick Look all the time when searching for pics and ebooks.

I use Quick Look to scan through hundreds of excel spreadsheets. I use it every day. If there is a Linux feature that does the same thing, I say way to go Linux! If there is a Windows feature that does the same thing, I say way to go Windows!

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Whatever, Linux has nothing like Quick Look.

You can't be more wrong - I use this since 2007 already! Kind of like coverflow, which Apple bought. Remember? Or wait, like the tabs in Safari, which are 'borrowed' from Mozilla, which borrowed it from MultiZilla. Or wait, like the tabs in Finder, which I developed for Apple and David Hyatt gets the credit for. Whatever!

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