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[Updated 3/13/2018] If scrolling on your Mac trackpad or Magic Mouse feels strangely upside-down, topsy-turvy, or just plain wrong, there's a simple explanation—and an easy fix.
Back in the olden days of Mac (not all that long ago, mind you), you'd flick 'up' on your mouse wheel or trackpad to scroll up, or down to scroll down. Seems logical, right?
'Natural scrolling' is the reason scrolling on your Mac feels backwards
Well, Mac users got a little surprise with 2011's 'Lion' update for OS X: 'natural scrolling,' which means (somewhat counterintuitively) that you flick up on your mouse to scroll down, and down to scroll up.
As a quite basic application, FlipClock for Mac downloads two separate ZIP files, one for a dashboard widget, and the other for a desktop application. When testing the installation of the widget. Mac/Windows Turn Your Mac/Windows Device Into a Flip Clock. Fliqlo for Mac/Windows is a clock screensaver that allows you to make your desktop/laptop device screen look like a flip clock. It displays the time with flip animation in large white numerals against a black background. Thanks to its visibility, you can read the time even from a distance. Right-click the photo you want to flip, click Open With, and select Preview. When the photo opens in Preview, click Tools at the top and select either Flip Horizontal or Flip Vertical. When your photo is flipped, click File Save to save your flipped photo.
So, what's the deal here?
Cyber racer (itch) mac os. Well, the idea behind 'natural scrolling' is that it mimics the way you swipe with your fingertips on an iPhone or iPad touchscreen.
On the iPhone, when you want to scroll down a web page, you touch the screen and drag up—and the page scrolls down. And if you want to scroll back up, you touch the screen again and drag … down.
Personally, my brain gets the whole 'natural scrolling' concept. But even after a few years, my fingers still stubbornly trying to flick up when I want to scroll up.
- SwitchResX (paid) Provides The Exact Functionality Your Are Looking For. It Allows You To Horizontally Flip The Display Output. This Mirror Image..
- Gadgets & Widgets
[Updated 3/13/2018] If scrolling on your Mac trackpad or Magic Mouse feels strangely upside-down, topsy-turvy, or just plain wrong, there's a simple explanation—and an easy fix.
Back in the olden days of Mac (not all that long ago, mind you), you'd flick 'up' on your mouse wheel or trackpad to scroll up, or down to scroll down. Seems logical, right?
'Natural scrolling' is the reason scrolling on your Mac feels backwards
Well, Mac users got a little surprise with 2011's 'Lion' update for OS X: 'natural scrolling,' which means (somewhat counterintuitively) that you flick up on your mouse to scroll down, and down to scroll up.
As a quite basic application, FlipClock for Mac downloads two separate ZIP files, one for a dashboard widget, and the other for a desktop application. When testing the installation of the widget. Mac/Windows Turn Your Mac/Windows Device Into a Flip Clock. Fliqlo for Mac/Windows is a clock screensaver that allows you to make your desktop/laptop device screen look like a flip clock. It displays the time with flip animation in large white numerals against a black background. Thanks to its visibility, you can read the time even from a distance. Right-click the photo you want to flip, click Open With, and select Preview. When the photo opens in Preview, click Tools at the top and select either Flip Horizontal or Flip Vertical. When your photo is flipped, click File Save to save your flipped photo.
So, what's the deal here?
Cyber racer (itch) mac os. Well, the idea behind 'natural scrolling' is that it mimics the way you swipe with your fingertips on an iPhone or iPad touchscreen.
On the iPhone, when you want to scroll down a web page, you touch the screen and drag up—and the page scrolls down. And if you want to scroll back up, you touch the screen again and drag … down.
Personally, my brain gets the whole 'natural scrolling' concept. But even after a few years, my fingers still stubbornly trying to flick up when I want to scroll up.
How to turn off natural scrolling on your Mac
In any case, we've got two options here. One: get used to the new 'natural' (or at least as far as Apple defines it). Or two: forget 'natural,' and go back to normal.
Visit Mouse or Trackpad preferences on your Mac to turn natural scrolling off.
SwitchResX (paid) Provides The Exact Functionality Your Are Looking For. It Allows You To Horizontally Flip The Display Output. This Mirror Image..
If you're opting for the latter, here's all you have to do:
- Open the Apple menu in the top-left corner of the page, then select System Preferences.
- Click the Mouse or Trackpad icon (depending on which one you're using), then make sure the 'Point & Click' tab is selected.
- See the first option, labeled 'Scroll direction: natural'? Uncheck that box to return to … well, unnatural scrolling.