My Dock

Filed under: Web/Tech | 9 Comments

This looks fun. So following Jason Kottke’s call, I am posting my dock. Unlike some of the others (and like Kottke), my Dock is in the default position. It’s as small as it goes just because I like my real estate.

dock.jpg

It goes: Finder, Mailsmith, SpamSieve, Camino, iTunes, iChat, Transmit, BBedit, NetNewsWire, Preview and TextEdit. Woot. I don’t think Preview or TextEdit are in the Dock when they aren’t open, but they are usually open so I should probably make them stick. The folder without markings is my old Applications folder (I have two drives and changed over a while ago). I am lazy.

I also recently cleaned house on the Dock… Took out the Terminal, Dreamweaver MX, Adium and Address Book. I think Dreamweaver MX 2004 and Hydra (erm, SubEthaEdit) will make it in. I’m pretty picky.

Read the latest posts

9 Responses to “My Dock”

  1. Jon Gales says:

    Heh. Sometimes people tease me about my small dock, I just say it’s how you use it. I don’t even use magnification.

  2. Tom Bridge says:

    We did a piece on it for MacSlash today as well, it seems showing your dock off is a cool thing to do now…

    *insert length of dock joke here*

  3. zanshin.net says:

    What’s Up, Dock

    O’Reilly is running an article about the contents of various peoples docks. Being a switcher from Windows I tend to

  4. inluminent says:

    My Dock

    Ok, I’ll play along. Here’s my dock: Pictured: Finder, iSync, Terminal, Adium, NetNewsWire, Mail, Safari, BBEdit (version 6.5 cause it…

  5. inluminent says:

    My Dock

    Ok, I’ll play along. Here’s my dock: Pictured: Finder, iSync, Terminal, Adium, NetNewsWire, Mail, Safari, BBEdit (version 6.5 cause it…

  6. synapse says:

    What’s In The Dock

    What’s in your Dock? Here’s what’s in mine. (Not bloody much.)

  7. My Dock

    Seems popular to post your dock to your blog at the moment, so heres mine and my menu as that seems relevent. Click the images for larger versions and search Google for any software mentioned.

  8. What’s in your dock?

    The dock, a feature of Mac OS X (and NeXTstep before it), is a really interesting way to get to know who someone is. Visually, you can determine what kind of user someone is: Are they an open-source junkie? a graphic artist? a web designer? photographe…

  9. What’s in your dock?

    The dock, a feature of Mac OS X (and NeXTstep before it), is a really interesting way to get to know who someone is. Visually, you can determine what kind of user someone is: Are they an open-source junkie? a graphic artist? a web designer? photographe…

Leave a Reply