![]() ![]() That brings us to the 2018 USCA! This year’s conference will be held Sept. We hope to see many of you there so mark your calendars now! If you’d like to register, exhibit, sponsor, or advertise at USCA, please visit our website.Ħ-9 in Orlando, Florida at the Hyatt Regency. We’re still in the early stages of planning this year’s Biomedical HIV Prevention Summit. Tara Barnes-Darby Alison McKeithen Shanta’ GrayĬonferences Director Conferences Manager Meetings and Registration Coordinator Keep watching here and on our website for more information. We need everyone to make their voices heard on behalf of everyone living with HIV and communities that are vulnerable to the epidemic.Īre you registered to vote? Do you know where you can register? Do you have all the documentation your state requires to vote, like a current photo ID? When is the primary election in your state? Are there any special elections for Congress or legislatures in your area? #Nmac ked dockshelf registration ![]() You can find answers to many of those questions here. You can also find links for your local elections offices to see which elections are coming up in your area.ĭon’t sit this vital election out! We need your voice!īecome a member of NMAC! With all of this critical work to be done, NMAC needs your help. We rely on the generous support of individuals and organizations to ensure that the voices of minorities vulnerable to and living with HIV are heard in DC and helps us provide our critical training, education activities, and programming.Let's say you launch an app that is not already positioned on your Dock. For example, you launch it from your Applications folder. Typically, it will plop itself onto your Dock - way over at the right end, assuming your preference is to have the Dock at the bottom of your screen. It will show up next to a small vertical line on the Dock's shelf. In Lion and Mountain Lion, this line is very faint almost invisible. It delineates the Dock area for apps (left side) and the area for documents, folders and the system trash can (right side). Plus, it leads you to some other goodies that I will mention a bit later. The Dock has visual cues indicating running apps. ![]() ![]() You will notice little blue "LED lights" underneath some app icons on the Dock. These "lights" indicate that the app associated with them are, in fact, launched and running. Again, as with that little line on the Dock, these are much more evident under Snow Leopard and older versions of (Mac) OS X. The line on the Dock separates apps from files and folders. You may be wondering why Apple is making these Dock indicators harder to see now in the "Lions." The thinking is that knowing whether an app is running or not is no longer useful or required. Without going into much detail, it stems from the fact that, as with iOS apps, and because of the new Auto Save features that make up part of Apple's new Modern Document Model, the Mac system will quietly quit any background apps that have not been active for a given amount of time. This is done in an effort to have OS X reclaim memory and operate more efficiently, while keeping your documents with all changes and versions always available to you. ![]()
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