This actually works, BUT, it doesn't fade out the files that have been set to be cut. The *only* way I can think of fixing this ridiculous garbage from Apple is by installing BetterTouchTool and setting up a keyboard shortcut for the Finder where: thank GOD I put my money towards a Hackintosh, I don't think Apple's going to get another dime out of me. ![]() I tried disabling that SIP garbage and ran XtraFinder as well as TotalFinder cmd+x/cmd+v still didn't work. The green button now HAS to have a default setting of fullscreen and no way of changing it's behaviour and now they effectively SCREW developers like TotalFinder and XtraFinder? Mavericks was the last 'true' user friendly OS and everything else since has really solidified the mockery from Windows users as OS X being a 'Fisher Price' operating system. Seriously, Apple's been testing the hell out of my limits ever since Yosemite. yeah? Well then why do they allow cmd+z which UNDOES any wrongdoing? WHY? Why is it so damn hard for them to pull their head out of their ass and implement what everyone else is KNOWS? Some people say the cut/paste functionality doesn't exist because of 'accidental moves'. How the hell does Apple continually get away with such moronic decisions? They've omitted a world standard as 'cut/paste' in the Finder. The problem is Apple doesn't care about those things and they don't really listen to user feedback. If Apple spent its time fixing up Finder instead of making flat ugly graphics, maybe I wouldn't need Xtrafinder in the first place (dual pane is the #1 thing I want in Finder for easy file transfers). ![]() Of course, if Apple just supported NFS in the preference pane like it does AFP and SMB, I wouldn't need to edit a plist file. ![]() Apple supports RAID and so they should support a solution that works with it. Just make a way to disable it without needing an actual partition. They just need a way to disable rootless without having to boot into a recovery partition (EFI menu option at boot time? A reboot password option? A USB boot key? Anything, really. They don't need a recovery partition on RAID volumes. The fact is there haven't been huge malware attacks on Macs in the past 14 years and I doubt that will change any time soon. No, it effectively keeps me from using those programs.
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