Mini mac os cursor
🍎 macOS Cursor Theme
Enjoy macOS Big Sur Cursor Theme for Windows and Linux with HiDPI Support 🎉 .
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- unzip macOSBigSur_Windows.zip file
- Open macOSBigSur_Windows/ in Explorer, and right click on install.inf .
- Click ‘Install’ from the context menu, and authorize the modifications to your system.
- Open Control Panel > Personalization and Appearance > Change mouse pointers, and select MacOSBigSur Cursors.
- Click ‘Apply‘.
macOSBigSur Cursors 🍎
macOSBigSur White Cursors 🍎
Install External Libraries
Build From Scratch
⚡ Auto Build (using GitHub Actions)
GitHub Actions is automatically runs on every push (on main and dev branches) and pull request (on main branch), You found theme resources in artifact section of build.GitHub Actions source is available inside .github/workflows directory.
Build XCursor theme
Customize XCursor size
Install XCursor theme
Build Windows theme
Customize Windows Cursor size
Bugs 🐛 should be reported here on the Github issues page.
You can create a issue, I will help you. 🙂
Check CONTRIBUTING.md, any suggestions for features and contributions to the continuing code masterelopment can be made via the issue tracker or code contributions via a Fork & Pull requests .
Give a ★ or Follow on GitHub,That’s work as Steroid 💉 for me. 😉
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Question: Q: Mac Mini Black screen with cursor at startup
Mac Mini 2013 and Mountain Lion 10.8.5. This computer worked fine until last night when it was started and the black screen with movable cursor appeared. Nothing modified, nothing new. No user-added RAM or anything else of that sort. No Windows, Bootcamp, VMWare, etc. Went though SUM at startup and repaired permissions. nothing. Started form Recovery Partition and did the same. nothing. The monitor obviously works correctly. Something in the boot sequence has changed or is corrupt.
Mac mini, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5)
Posted on Mar 11, 2014 1:33 PM
I had the same issue with my 2008 iMac and Apple support walked me through the fix yesterday.
1. Shut the computer down by holding the power button for 10 seconds
2. Restart the computer and press shift at the same time until you see the progress bar start moving
3. Once you reach the point where your screen goes dark and you see the cursor, type the first letter of the username for your computer, then hit Enter, then type your password, then hit Enter.
4. After a moment, you should see the spinning beach ball
5. Your screen should then move on to something along the lines of «Completing OSX Installation» (I can’t remember the exact wording). Let it finish. After that it should go to your normal desktop and the issue should be fixed. (If your screen goes pitch black during this process, hit the space bar. I thought it wasn’t working, but the screen was just sleeping).
Apparently it’s an issue with an automatic update that never quite got past the login screen.
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Mini mac os cursor
The Accessibility pane of System Preferences holds a number of interesting adjustments you can set to make your Mac easier to use. One of them is the ability to change the size of the cursor; the pointer you see on your screen.
Go to System Preferences > Accessibility, then click on Display. Drag the Cursor Size slider from Normal (smallest) toward Large. Find the size you want to use, and close the preference pane.
I have a 27″ Thunderbolt Display, and I find the normal-sized cursor a bit small, so I’ve set mine to be a bit larger. You may find this to be a useful tweak as well.
Note that some applications may not use the changed setting. Feel free to post in the comments any apps that don’t inherit this setting.
- Currently 3.56 / 5
You rated: 1 / 5 (9 votes cast)
Hint Options
>the cursor; the pointer you see on your screen.
No it isn’t, a cursor is not a pointer. You can have both on the screen at the same time, and both may be used to perform specific tasks, separately or together, such as clicking the mouse button while holding the shift key to select a block of text between the cursor and the pointer. It is important to keep the terms separate to avoid confusion. Despite the wording used in Accessibility, I suggest the hint’s title be changed to refer to the pointer or mouse pointer.
Apple not knowing the difference says a lot too.
A pointer is a type of cursor. You can have more than one cursor on your screen — the distinction you’re trying to make is between the text input cursor and mouse cursor (aka the mouse pointer).
Actually, depending on the app, both the pointer (mouse cursor) and cursor (text cursor) will change size. Even the hand cursor that shows up when you hover over a link in Safari will change size. But I assume that not all apps will do this correctly.
> Apple not knowing the difference says a lot too.
Apple and its UI team is well aware of the difference; they just know what the word «cursor» means. It’s a stereotypical answer, but look it up on Wikipedia for a simple, couple-sentence explanation—any input indicator onscreen is a «cursor», be it for text, mouse clicks, or manipulation in a 3D space. I certainly refer to the onscreen mouse pointer as a cursor.
Couple of interesting things about this hint: At least under 10.6, it does not affect the size of the text-input cursor, just the mouse cursor, and on 10.8 (maybe 10.7?), you get a much smoother-looking jumbo-cursor (one assumes because of the high-def retina artwork added to the OS).
I use that on my Mac Mini HTPC — nearly impossible to see the mouse (cursor/pointer/whatever) on the TV at normal size. Weird behavior I get is every once in a while it reverts back to normal size and I don’t know why.
The size of the cursor reverts to normal every time I close the lid on my MacBook Pro, even though the «Cursor Size» setting looks the same in the Accessibility preference pane. I have to click on the setting to get the cursor to go back to my preferred, larger size.
Now if Apple would just allow the pointer direction to flip to accommodate us leftys.
There is one big problem with this — Photoshop (at least the CS4 version) has its brush cursors (Adobe does call them cursors) linked to this setting so if we enlarge the cursor so we can actually see it on our 17″ MBPs, then a 30 pixel brush’s representation covers the whole document — but actually paints the correct 30 pixel area. Makes it really hard to know what you’re going to be airbrushing out. So we have to keep opening the System Settings to put the cursor back to «invisible on our screen» size before we use Photoshop.
Pain in the patootie.
So would there be a way to change this preference through the terminal? The reason I ask is because i would like to set a keyboard shortcut to enlarge and decrease the size of my cursor so that when I go to a program like Photoshop I can shrink it quickly. If someone can come up with an if/else similar to this one here for showing/hiding hidden files so that I could put it into Automator, that would be awesome!
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Mini mac os cursor
A free cursor manager for Mac OS 10.8+ built using private, nonintrusive CoreGraphics APIs.
Mousecape works by calling the API calls that Apple uses to initialize the system cursors in the system and it registers a daemon that will automatically apply the cursor on login and when cursors get unregistered.
It is unintrusive and works in the background. You just need to open the app, click Mousecape —> Install Helper Tool, apply your cursor and you’re done!
Where do I get cursors?
A pack of cursors in Mousecape is called a cape, each cape contains a multiple scales of representations of many cursors. For example, the Arrow cursor can have 1x, 2x, 5x, and 10x representations while the Wait cursor can have 1x, and 2x.
There is an example cape file included in this Git Repo located here for download. It is a remake of Max Rudberg’s loved Svanslös cursors generously crafted by Max for us to use. Simply double click the cape file with Mousecape on your system and it will be imported into your library.
How can I create my own cape?
You can create a new cape document in the Mousecape app by hitting ⌘N (Command-N) and editing it with ⌘E. Click the «+» button to add cursors to customize and symply drag your images into the fields provided.
How do animated cursors work?
When you want to animate a cursor, change the value in the frames field in the edit window and make sure frame duration is how you want it. Next, create an image that has all of your cursor frames stacked on top of each other vertically. Mousecape will traverse down the image for each frame, using a box the same size as whatever you put in the size field.
How can I say thanks?
Tell your friends.
Where can I get a copy of this sweet tool?
In the releases section of this GitHub page. There are stable reases there. The current version is 1813.
There’s now the beginning of a wiki
Look for the wiki symbol in the toolbar here on this GitHub page or through here wiki section
I worked very hard researching the private methods used in Mousecape and creating this app. Please respect me and my work by not using any of the information provided here for commercial purposes.
Copyright (c) 2013-2014, Alex Zielenski All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
- Any redistribution, use, or modification is done solely for personal benefit and not for any commercial purpose or for monetary gain
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS «AS IS» AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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Cursor Pro 4+
IXEAU
Снимки экрана
Описание
Are you a presenter, meeting host, tutorial creator, remote teacher or student? Do you want to be able to more easily see your mouse pointer on that giant iMac screen? Need a handy magnifier to zoom in? “Cursor Pro” makes finding your pointer and pixels easier than ever and makes sure everyone else following along can see it, too. And that’s just the start!
“A-plus app for students” — Mac App Store (03.2021)
With “Cursor Pro” you can make your pointer pulse and beg for attention when you can’t find it and have it act as a magnifier all from one carefully designed, fun-to-use app. It’s fully customizable: Choose how you want your pointer to be highlighted with options including a circle, an eye-pleasing squircle, and a diamond-shaped rhombus. Want to make it appear a specific color? No problem. You can even make it look like something out of the world with a cyberpunk-esque glow if that’s your thing, too!
You’ll find “Cursor Pro” invaluable and indispensable if you:
• Want to make a professional impression. Use your Mac to demonstrate apps, workflows, or anything else. People will see your pointer and the clicks you perform more easily.
• Work remotely and need to be able to share your screen with a colleague without them asking what you’re doing all the time. Your pointer, and the actions you perform, will be clearly visible.
• Present on a big screen and want to make sure everyone can see exactly what you’re doing without issue. Enable the magnifier and make sure everyone can see on-screen text and interface elements.
• Capture on-screen tutorials for sharing online or to help promote an app or service.
• Have a large screen or even multiple displays. Losing your pointer is something that happens to many of us far too often. Cursor Pro will make sure you always know where your pointer is.
• Customizable Cursor Highlight: Choose your preferred Shape, Size, Weight, Border Style, Glow, Animations and Colors.
• Magnifier: Set up a magnifying key, choose a zoom factor, define magnifier qualify and size.
• Behavior: Auto-Hide, Beg For Attention, Global Hot Key.
• Display the app within your Dock, the StatusBar or both.
• Autostart: Launch the app automatically on login.
• Works great with Screen Sharing apps like Zoom, Google Hangout or Skype (but share your entire screen, not just a single window!)
• Updated for macOS 11 Big Sur
• Optimized for Mac with M1 (Apple Silicon)
We take your privacy seriously. “Cursor Pro” doesn’t collect any data and all of your actions and clicks stay offline, on your computer. No network connection is needed for “Cursor Pro” to function.
If you enjoy the app please consider to rate it. It’s a great way to support indie developers like me.
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