![]() ![]() Once all that is done, Gears synchronizes your data, which shouldn’t take long unless you have a vast number of documents stored in Google Docs. webloc file provides exactly the same functionality as the Google Docs application that Gears creates. Merely dragging the Google Docs URL from Safari’s address bar to the Desktop to create a. Double-clicking it opens Google Docs in the Web browser that was your default as of when you created it it isn’t smart enough to switch if you change your default, but you can recreate it if necessary. The desktop shortcut is actually a small application that’s created on your Desktop, but it doesn’t have to stay there. Gears then asks if you want to make a desktop shortcut, which isn’t necessary, and can be done later if you want. Allow it to use Gears” checkbox and click Allow. Next, Gears asks if it’s acceptable to store data on your computer (necessary, of course, but nice to be asked). Instead, go to Google Docs, and at the upper right of the page, click the Offline link next to your email address to continue the installation process in a series of dialog boxes.įirst, Google Gears asks you to enable offline access click the Enable Offline Access button. You can also verify that the installation has worked by looking for a Google Gears Settings menu item in the Safari application menu. Gears automatically updates itself, so when Google releases new versions, you should just get the updates. You’ll have to restart Safari to finish the installation. ![]() Instead, download this disk image and run the installer inside. Installation and Setup - Until Google officially releases Gears for Safari, you can’t follow the normal installation method, which is to visit the Gears home page and click the Install Gears button (do that if you want to install in Firefox now). Some people don’t like input managers if so, stick with the Firefox version. Gears for Firefox is a Firefox add-on, but for Safari, Gears has two parts, an input manager (installed in /Library/InputManagers) and an Internet plug-in (installed in /Library/Internet Plugins). The Safari release was quiet, and Google’s Gears home page doesn’t yet acknowledge (Nearly everything Google does is labeled as beta, even after years of development and millions of users, which makes it difficult to determine the actual state of the code.) I had tried Gears with Firefox briefly before our trip to Wales, but I found it a bit confusing and hadn’t come back to it until this Safari release, which I suspect will be attractive to more Mac users anyway. Gears has been available for the Mac via the Firefox Web browser for some time, but Google just released a “beta” version of Gears for Safari. When connectivity is reestablished, Gears synchronizes the changes back up to Google’s storage cloud. Gears addresses the disconnected problem with a database engine based on SQLite, and Gears-enabled pages can send and receive data from this local database cache when offline. Google has been working on eliminating this limitation with a technology called Google Gears (Zoho Writer and a few other Web apps also use Gears – it’s an open source technology that any developer can implement). Like all online word processors, Google Docs has one significant architectural limitation: if you don’t have Internet access, your documents are completely unavailable to you. Its brilliant collaborative capabilities more than make up for its minimal feature set, and I have found it better for my needs than similar products like Zoho Writer and Buzzword, which don’t seem as focused on enabling quick collaboration. ![]() Although it’s a mediocre word processor, we’ve started using Google Docs for certain sorts of collaborative writing, such as when Tonya and I are working on marketing materials for Take Control, or when I’m writing an article for Macworld. It’s ironic that with all the writing I do, I’ve never settled on a single word processor, instead picking and choosing among lots of different ones depending on the task at hand. ![]() #1667: OS Rapid Security Responses, 1Password and 2FA, using Siri to request music.#1668: Updated Rapid Security Responses, OS public betas, screen saver bug fixed, “Red Team Blues” book review.#1669: OS security updates, ambiguity of emoji, small business payments with Melio, Twitter now X.#1670: Arc Web browser hits 1.0 release, “Do You Use It?” polls about Apple features.#1671: Apple Q3 2023 earnings, new Beats headphones and earbuds, Stage Manager adoption rate, do you use Spotlight?. ![]()
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