Disable Mail's data detectors in OS X 10.5 Iowa City IA

Learn how to disable OS X 10.5Æs Mail data detectors-that feature that highlights addresses, dates, and times, and lets you add relevant info to Address Book or iCal.

Local Companies

City Electric Supply Inc
(319) 338-7561
315 E Prentiss St
Iowa City, IA
Crescent Electric Supply Co
(319) 337-9651
416 Highland Ave
Iowa City, IA
Crescent Electric Supply Co
(319) 524-1561
1720 Blondeau St
Keokuk, IA
Reliance Electric
(563) 386-6000
5770 Tremont Ave
Davenport, IA
Mid-Land Equipment Co
(319) 399-1033
1901 16th Ave SW
Cedar Rapids, IA
Future Electronics
(563) 332-6275
Bettendorf, IA
Crescent Electric
(563) 556-7224
11190 Airport Rd
Dubuque, IA
Rex Tv
(515) 955-1941
216 S 26th St
Fort Dodge, IA
Rural Tv
(563) 785-4690
622 5th St
Durant, IA
Kriz-Davis Co Elec Equip
(515) 232-2304
202 SE 5th St
Ames, IA

provided by: 


Data detectors are one of the new features in the OS X 10.5 version of Mail. Data detectors watch for addresses, dates, and times in e-mail messages, and when found, highlight those regions of text when the mouse enters them, displaying a button to show a contextual menu. Activate the contextual menu, and you can create new iCal events or Address Book contacts based on the highlighted information.

While I find the data detectors very useful, some people don't find them useful at all. If, for instance, you don't use iCal to manage your schedule or Address Book to manage your contacts, you don't have much need for data detectors in Mail. Or perhaps you just find the highlighting annoying and never use the feature, even if you use iCal and Address Book. Regardless the reason, it turns you you can disable Mail's data detectors. Quit Mail and open Terminal, then run this command:

defaults write com.apple.mail DisableDataDetectors YES

When you launch Mail the next time, you'll find that iCal and Address Book data bits are no longer detected. If you ever want to re-enable this feature, quit Mail, and repeat the above Terminal command, but change YES to NO, then start Mail again.


Read article at Macworld.com

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History