How to set up multiple monitors with your Mac. With just a few minutes of your time and the appropriate accessories, you can connect an extra display to your Mac and increase your productivity. Hook instantly links, bookmarks and retrieves files, web pages, tasks, emails, & more—whether they're on your Mac or the web. Join professors and others (lawyers, software developers, creatives, & all kinds of people) who love getting more out of their favorite apps while staying focused— thanks to Hook. Try it for free. . Mac OS X 10.6/10.7: In the Apple menu or the Dock, select System Preferences. Select Print & Fax or Print & Scan, select your product, and select Options & Supplies. Select Utility and select Open Printer Utility. Mac OS X 10.4/10.5: In the Apple menu or the Dock, select System Preferences.
Ƒ ƒ |
Ƒ ƒ |
The letter F with a hook (majuscule Ƒ, minuscule: ƒ) is a letter of the Latin script, based on the italic form of f; or on its regular form with a descender hook added. A very similar-looking letter, ⟨ʄ⟩ (a dotless j with a hook and a horizontal stroke), is used in the IPA for a voiced palatal implosive.
Regular[edit]
Ƒ is used in writing the Ewe language in a straight form to represent the sound [ɸ], as distinct from the letter F, which represents an [f].
Italic[edit]
The minuscule italic ƒ, also called the florin sign, is used as a symbol for several currencies, including the former Dutch guilder, the Aruban florin, and the Netherlands Antillean guilder. It can be found as italic in non-italic fonts.
The italic ƒ has been used to denote mathematical functions,[1] or to indicate aperture in photography (e.g. ƒ/2.8) in place of the more common italic f (in serif fonts) or oblique f (in sans-serif fonts).[citation needed] It can be represented with U+1D453𝑓MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL F.
Appearance in computer fonts[edit]
Ƒ is used in writing the Ewe language in a straight form to represent the sound [ɸ], as distinct from the letter F, which represents an [f].
Italic[edit]
The minuscule italic ƒ, also called the florin sign, is used as a symbol for several currencies, including the former Dutch guilder, the Aruban florin, and the Netherlands Antillean guilder. It can be found as italic in non-italic fonts.
The italic ƒ has been used to denote mathematical functions,[1] or to indicate aperture in photography (e.g. ƒ/2.8) in place of the more common italic f (in serif fonts) or oblique f (in sans-serif fonts).[citation needed] It can be represented with U+1D453𝑓MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL F.
Appearance in computer fonts[edit]
Older fonts and character encodings included only the minuscule form for its use as an abbreviation. Unicode includes both the majuscule and the minuscule.Because of its origin, the italic ƒ (f with a hook) looks exactly like the italic f (f) in some typefaces.Ƒ and ƒ occupy code points U+0191ƑLATIN CAPITAL LETTER F WITH HOOK and U+0192ƒLATIN SMALL LETTER F WITH HOOK in Unicode respectively, and may be entered by appropriate input methods.
On a computer running Microsoft Windows and using the Windows-1252 character encoding, the minuscule can be input using alt+159 or alt+0131.
The character has been used on the Macintosh to mean folder, in particular as part of a folder name. For example, the game Bugdom, when included on some Mac OS 9 installations, was contained in a folder called 'Bugdom ƒ'. This usage has died out with the advent of Mac OS X. The Macintosh Programmer's Workshop also used the character to indicate software dependencies, from which the folder usage derived (the folder contained the files required to run the program). The character is created on the Macintosh by pressing ⌥ Opt+f.
The character frequently appears in Japanesemojibake. The lead byte 0x83 appears before a Katakana character in Shift JIS, but if interpreted as Windows-1252 encoding, it becomes the ƒ character.
This character is also used as the sign for aperture on cameras and photo metadata.
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^'Latin Extended-B'(PDF). Official Unicode code chart. Retrieved January 17, 2009.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
External links[edit]
Whenever you upgrade your operating system (OS), you will need to CAC-enable (i.e. Public Key Enable) the system all over again. You should refer to the instructions and downloads available from the web pages under Getting Started for End Users (Mac) on DISA's Information Assurance Support Environment (IASE) website. You will need middleware to use your CAC on OS X. The instructions on IASE will direct you to Smartcard Services (middleware) downloads from Mac OS forge. Smartcard Services will work for most CACs and readers, however, if you do not see your CAC keychain in the Keychain Access.app after installing the Smartcard Services package and inserting your CAC in the card reader, then I recommend using another free middleware called Centrify Express.
Aside from installing middleware, you need to download and import the DoD Root and Intermediate Certificates in your Keychain Access. Most of the DoD certificates are available if you add the 'SystemCACertificates' keychain using the File > Add Keychain option and navigating through the folders to Macintosh HD > System > Library > Keychains. You need to download and import a few certificates into the 'login' keychain, such as DOD ROOT CA 2 (3 certificates total), DOD ROOT CA 3, and any intermediate certificates that issued the certificates on your CAC, which are greater than DOD CA-30 (such as DOD CA-31, DOD EMAIL CA-31, DOD CA-32, DOD EMAIL CA-32, DOD ID CA-33, DOD EMAIL CA-33, DOD ID CA-34, DOD EMAIL CA-34, etc.). Go to the Cross-Certificate Chaining Issue page to download two zip files (i.e.Certificates_PKCS7_v4.1u4_DoD.zip and unclass-irca1_dodroot_ca2.zip, then use the File > Import Certificate option to add the certificates to the 'login' keychain. All DoD Intermediate Certificates are available for download (one-by-one) from the DoD PKI Management website at https://crl.gds.disa.mil/ (download the Certificate Authority Certificate, not the Certificate Revocation List, i.e. CRL) for each certificate.
Hook N' Lure Mac Os X
Hook N' Lure Mac Os 11
Company: Southwest I.T. Solutions
Mar 13, 2016 9:22 PM