MacOS’ default Terminal isn’t exactly difficult to reach (you can find it by navigating to ‘Applications > Utilities > Terminal’). Decide which keyboard shortcut you want to use, and then click the ‘Hotkey’ field.Click the ‘Create a Dedicated Hotkey window…’ button.Select ‘iTerm2 > Preferences…’ from the iTerm2 toolbar.When you switch to iTerm2, you gain the ability to create a keyboard shortcut that lets you launch the “Terminal” window with the press of a few keys: However, if you use the Terminal on a regular basis, then the fact that you can’t launch it with a keyboard shortcut is one of those little niggles that can become seriously frustrating. This field should now display a ‘Recording’ label. You should now see a message that a new ‘Hotkey Window’ has been created.When you’re happy with the shortcut you’ve created, click ‘OK.’.Press the keys that you want to use, and the field should update to display these keys. Test your keyboard shortcut by closing the ‘Preferences…’ window and exiting iTerm2. Now press your keys, and an iTerm2 overlay should appear. You can interact with this overlay in exactly the same way you interact with the regular iTerm2 window. Exit iTerm2 and then repeat your keyboard shortcut, and you should see that the iTerm2 overlay is no longer transparent.Drag the ‘Window appearance’ slider to the ‘Opaque’ end of the scale.In the left-hand menu, select the ‘Hotkey Window’ profile.Select ‘iTerm2 > Preferences…’ form the iTerm2 menu bar.To turn this overlay opaque, so that it looks more like the “regular” iTerm2 window: However, sometimes transparency can be distracting, for example if you have a particularly noisy wallpaper then you might struggle to read the iTerm2 text. One particularly useful iTerm2 feature that isn’t available in the standard Terminal, is split-screen view. ![]() This allows you to have two iTerm2 windows side-by-side, which operate independently of one another. To take a look at this split-screen view, press the ‘Command+D’ keyboard shortcut. Mayor Gavin Buckley and former mayor Mike Pantelides together raised nearly half a million dollars in their efforts to become mayor of Annapolis. The two far outpaced fundraising efforts in the previous mayoral race and managed to garner a combined $460,133.65 in contributions. Pantelides and former mayor Joshua Cohen raised a combined $195,337 during the 2013 campaign.īuckley, a Democrat who was sworn in Monday, and Pantelides, a first-term Republican, outspent previous efforts as well, disbursing a total of $471,764.59. Pantelides began his efforts with funds raised during his 2013 run and his four years as mayor, allowing him to spend more than he raised.īuckley’s grassroots efforts and unusual fundraisers paid off - he raised $190,235.33 between September 2016 and last month. Pantelides outpaced his own 2013 efforts, raising $269,898.32 between June 2016 and November 2017. He garnered $85,113 during his first run.įor the final filing period, Buckley’s largest donors were the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Pipe Fitting Industry, Team 30 Slate Committee, Rowe Industries and American National Rubber ANR Partners Inc. He also received donations from former Republican mayoral candidate Nevin Young, Alderman Ross Arnett and his wife, Alderman Rob Savidge and Janice Hayes-Williams, a campaign adviser who was named a senior staff member of the mayor’s office Monday.
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