

Maybe I’m doing something wrong here, but given the space that some of these metadata can occupy, it would be nice if this feature were to work. Others only apply as long as the Preview Options window is open. The only one of the options offered in that window which does seem to work is the item at its foot, Show Quick Actions. The moment that you dismiss the Preview Options window, though, Finder reverts to what it feels I want to see, in this case adding several items from the General section. In this case, PDFs are set up to show just the basic file information in the preview, as shown in the example in this Finder window. Use the Show Preview Options command to display controls over which items are listed below the QuickLook thumbnail. Select a document of the type whose Finder preview you want to customise, such as a JPEG image. Less entertaining and more irritating is the complete failure of Finder’s Show Preview Options in its View menu – a useful feature which simply doesn’t work on either of my Macs here, again running 10.15.3. We all know that HD stands for Hard Disk (or Drive), but just carry on in case something deep in the bowels of macOS can’t live without the ancient name. I find it quaint enough that Catalina’s new boot Volume Group still defaults to referring to its two sibling volumes as Macintosh HD and Macintosh HD - Data. And yes, this is Catalina 10.15.3, not Leopard 10.5.

Try this on your own Mac if you don’t believe me. They’re SSD all the way through, yet open Finder’s Preferences, and in the General and Sidebar sections, the internal SSD or, as Apple prefers to call it elsewhere Flash Drive, is there referred to as a Hard disk.
#Shorter oxford english dictionary mac install flash pro#
Neither my iMac Pro nor my MacBook Pro 16-inch have any option to come with an internal hard disk, or even a Fusion Drive for that matter. It’s a question almost good enough for one of Saturday’s Mac riddles: where does every Mac tell its user that it’s still got a “hard disk”?
