ForceQuit

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  • Mac 101: Force Quit

    by 
    Victor Agreda Jr
    Victor Agreda Jr
    07.13.2009

    If you're switching from Windows you may be familiar with an old friend, the Task Manager. Apple provides a similar tool, with an easy way to force unruly applications to quit. I'll get to why you'd want to do this in a moment. To access Force Quit, you can either go to the Apple menu in the top left corner of your screen, and choose Force Quit... Alternately, you can press three keys at once: Command + Option + Esc.* It's sort of the Mac version of Ctrl-Alt-Delete.Why would you want to force an application to quit? Sometimes applications get "stuck" for whatever reason and can't recover. If you notice the "rainbow wheel" spinning when you try to access the application and it just won't do anything, check the Force Quit tool and see if the name of the application is red and there's a parenthetical warning "not responding." This is your cue to use Force Quit -- just be aware that sometimes an application might not be responding, but might still be "alive." Typically what I do is go grab a cup of coffee, or stretch, and give the app 2-5 minutes to get itself together. If it is still stuck, I force quit.For more on Force Quit, check out this Apple tips article on "Knowing When to (Force) Quit." And knowing is half the battle.*Fixed, thanks to the handy commenters!

  • Rumsfeld resignation captioned well by Mac OS X

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    11.08.2006

    While TUAW certainly isn't a political blog (though there is an easy argument to be made that politics and technology are fatefully intertwined), you might have heard Donald Rumsfeld, secretary of defense, is stepping down. While I don't want to incite the ever-prevalent political arguments of mass destruction, I thought the use of Mac OS X to summarize today's announcement was clever enough to warrant a chuckle. Like Mr. Gruber, I'd rather not spoil any of the joke, which is why I didn't snag the picture for this post. You'll just have to check it out for yourself.

  • Beat your Mac into submission

    by 
    Scott McNulty
    Scott McNulty
    04.14.2006

    Sometimes, even on a Mac, applications go a little wonky. They stop responding, they freeze, or you are treated to everyone's favorite sight: the spinning beachball of death. Ted Landau has compiled a quick list of something things that you can do quit a misbehaving program, or to speed up Safari.Even after all that, once in awhile an application refuses to die and one must delve into the strange, and frightening world of the Terminal, however, Ted doesn't cover that.

  • TUAW Tip: Kill an accidentally-opened app

    by 
    Dan Pourhadi
    Dan Pourhadi
    02.13.2006

    The dock is a great tool, but it can also be a great pain in the ampersand-dollarsign-dollarsign. It's incredibly easy to accidentally click an app you're not interested in opening -- forcing you to wait for it to load so you can then close it out, adding an abundance of unnecessary seconds to your objective.Well, there's no way to really fix that, but there is a way to salvage some of those seconds: When you accidentally click an app, quickly click-and-hold on the app's dock icon while holding down the Option key. The context menu will pop up, and you can force kill it before it bogs down your system in loading.Not the best or most efficient method of time-saving, but hey -- it works.