![]() So I can use my keyboard shortcut and jump to it. I can switch between these screens using Mission Control. If I go over to Desktop 1 I have my other apps, TextEdit, and I've got Reminders, and I've got Contacts open. Just click on it and now I go to this Desktop. Guess what you can do? You can drag and drop onto Desktop 2 and now you can switch between them. You have to roll your mouse over there to see it. But also you can use it to create more Desktops. You click on it and Contacts is at the front. So the first thing I want to do with Mission Control is just use this to figure out which app you want to look at. You can imagine that makes sense because I have one screen on my Mac so that's all I've got.īut I can actually add more. ![]() I've got just one desktop here, one screen. You can see it breaks apart everything into little groups and you see the windows inside those groups and the icon for the app that is running. Let me click on Mission Control here but most of the time you are going to want to use the keyboard shortcut. You can kind of use Mission Control to pretend that you've got more than one screen or at least be able to find apps on your small screen. I just don't have enough space here to see them all and work with them. I've got a lot of different windows open and a lot of different apps. So this is a type of situation Mission Control can help out with. Let me show you how to use Mission Control on your Mac. Unfortunately I think they're using an incompatible Bluetooth chipset.Check out Using Mission Control at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.
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