Hi I'm new here and I'm happy to be the proud owner of my first MAC computer. Loving it so far but I need to get used to some functions available to a normal PC. Can anyone telll me if it's possible to search for spefic words within a document or website. When I search for specific items in a search engine and the websites come up, I want to be able to search for the words when I click on the search engine results. Previously for windows PC I will press the 'Control-F' function and they will search and highlight the words that come up. ![]() Can anynoe let me know if MAC provides this function as well? Google said it will stop supporting the Drive app for Macs and PCs on December 11, and the Drive app will simply stop working on March 12, 2018. Google drive for mac/pc is going away soon. A pop-up box just appeared on my Mac desktop that said 'Google Drive for Mac/PC is going away soon.To continue syncing files on your desktop, install Drive File Stream'What's up with this? I don't see anything on the Google Drive website that indicates it is shutting down. May 04, 2006 How do you find words on a mac? I've tried ctr +f forever and it won't work and it's really annoying. Does anybody know how to find specific words on a mac? What do you mean 'find words'? You can search for words in specific programs, like if you have Microsoft Word open, you can do a search. You can try Sherlock if it's. This wikiHow teaches you how to find a specific word or phrase in a PDF document using free Adobe Reader DC application or the Google Chrome browser for Mac and PC, or by using the Preview application on a Mac. Has a convenient 'Find' feature to in a webpage, and Apple Books has a similar feature for e-books and PDFs. But those do nothing for you when searching text in the real world. Hardcover and paperback books are still very much a thing, as well as paper-based documents, and finding what you need is as simple as pointing your iPhone's camera at the page. Imagine you're scanning through a lengthy paper document for a specific word or trying to locate a specific reference on one of the pages in a huge textbook. Sometimes the index can help if one is available, but otherwise, you need to speed read to find what you're looking for. All that ends now though. • Don't Miss: Thanks to developer, we have an iOS app that can instantly scan for any word or phrase on a page in the flesh-and-blood world. All you have to do is point your camera at the document and use the app's built-in Ctrl-F (or Command-F for Mac users) feature to spot exactly what's needed. Step 1: Install SearchCam Ozturk's app, SearchCam, is available for free in the iOS App Store. And the app works with and without any data connections since there's no interaction to and from any server. • App Store Link: (free). SearchCam's user interface isn't the prettiest since it's marred by an advertisement banner on the bottom and hasn't been updated to be optimized with newer screen ratios of the iPhone X and newer. But it's simple and intuitive for even the most novice smartphone users. Step 2: Search Real-World Documents Open the SearchCam app, grant it access to your camera, then type in the word or phrase you're looking for in the 'Search' box. Next, all you have to do is point your iPhone's camera at the book, document, pamphlet, magazine, bill, or whatever else it is you want to scan for text. • Don't Miss: Since the SearchCam app is basically a real-time OCR (optical character recognition) tool with an augmented reality inclination, where it's live-reading a moving image, it works right away.
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