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Dwight Spivey

"How to Do Everything: Mac"

An example would be if someone emailed you a webpage address, also known as a link,
to an interesting article, but you just don??™t know what to do with it. You could manually type
the address in your web browser??™s address field, but if it??™s a long address you might be there all
day, switching back and forth between your email application and your web browser to see what
the next few letters or numbers in the address are. (Just reading that last sentence was tedious
enough, never mind actually performing such a mind-numbing task!) The easiest way to access
that link is to simply click the link itself, if you??™re using Mac OS X??™s default email program,
Mail; this action will automatically open Safari, Mac OS X??™s web browser, to the webpage the
link is pointing to.
However, sometimes a link may not be clickable, possibly due to the email being formatted
as plain text. For such cases, there??™s an amazing technique (heavy sarcasm intended) called
???copy and paste??? that has made human coexistence with computers go pretty smoothly for a
couple of decades now.


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