The Gateway Trilogy Mac OS

Holmes is the internationally best-selling author of the paranormal series, 'The Gateway Trilogy' and 'The Gateway Trackers'. Her novel 'Spirit Legacy (The Gateway Trilogy Book 1)', was named a first place category winner in both the Paranormal Awards and the Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction by Chanticleer Book Reviews. Gateway is an award-winning minimalist puzzle adventure set in a desolate black void. The Gateway Trilogy includes remastered versions of the first two games – plus a never-before-seen third installment. $9.99 Visit the Store Page.

Check display support

The Gateway Trilogy Mac Os 11

You can connect one or more external displays depending on your Mac model. To find out how many external displays your Mac supports, check its technical specifications:

  1. Choose Apple menu  > About This Mac.
  2. Click the Support tab.
  3. Click Specifications.
  4. On the webpage that appears, the number of displays your Mac supports appears under Video Support or Graphics.

If you're using a Mac with Apple silicon, you can connect a single external display to your Mac using one of the Thunderbolt / USB 4 ports. Docks don't increase the number of displays you can connect as an extended desktop. On Mac mini (M1, 2020), you can connect a second display to the HDMI port.

Connect your display

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Connect your display to power, then connect your display to your Mac. Check the ports on your Mac to find out whether you need an adapter.

Change display options

After you connect your display, you can choose to extend your desktop or mirror your displays.

Use extended desktop mode

  1. Choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, then click Displays.
  2. Click the Arrangement tab.
  3. Make sure that the Mirror Displays checkbox isn’t selected.
  4. Arrange your displays to match the setup on your desk. To change the position of a display, drag it to the desired position. A red border appears around the display as it's moved.
  5. To set a different display as the primary display, drag the menu bar to the other display. The primary display is where your desktop icons and app windows first appear.

Mirror your displays

  1. Make sure that your external display is turned on and connected to your Mac.
  2. Choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, click Displays, then click the Arrangement tab.
  3. Make sure that the Mirror Displays checkbox is selected.

Use AirPlay

With Apple TV, you can use your TV as a separate display for your Mac. Learn how to use AirPlay to mirror or extend your Mac display.

Learn more

Question or issue on macOS:

I need to retrieve the default gateway on a Mac machine. I know that in Linux route -n will give an output from which I can easily retrieve this information. However this is not working in Mac OSX(Snow Leopard).

I also tried netstat -nr grep ‘default’, but I was hoping for a cleaner output like that produced by route -n in Linux/Unix. netstat -nr lists all the interfaces and the default gateway for them.

Any kind of suggestion or a hint in the right direction will be appreciated.

Mac

How to solve this problem?

Solution no. 1:

You can try with:

It is not the same as GNU/Linux’s route -n (or even ip route show) but is useful for checking the default route information.
Also, you can check the route that packages will take to a particular host. E.g.

The output would be similar to:

IMHO netstat -nr is what you need. Even MacOSX’s Network utility app(*) uses the output of netstat to show routing information.

I hope this helps 🙂

(*) You can start Network utility with open /Applications/Utilities/Network Utility.app

Solution no. 2:

For getting the list of ip addresses associated, you can use netstat command

This gives a long list of ip addresses and it is not easy to find the required field. The sample result is as following:

The ip address of gateway is in the first line; one with default at its first column.

To display only the selected lines of result, we can use grep command along with netstat

This command filters and displays those lines of result having default. In this case, you can see result like following:

If you are interested in finding only the ip address of gateway and nothing else you can further filter the result using awk. The awk command matches pattern in the input result and displays the output. This can be useful when you are using your result directly in some program or batch job.

The awk command tells to match and print the second column of the result in the text. The final result thus looks like this:

In this case, netstat displays all result, grep only selects the line with ‘default’ in it, and awk further matches the pattern to display the second column in the text.

You can similarly use route -n get default command to get the required result. The full command is

These commands work well in linux as well as unix systems and MAC OS.

Solution no. 3:

The Gateway Trilogy Mac Os 7

The grep utility is not needed. Awk can do it all:

Note that if you have something like Parallels (or a VPN, or both) running, you may see two or more default routing entries – it will be true if you use the ‘grep’ suggestion above, too.

and

To set a variable (_default) for further use (assuming only one entry for ‘default’) …..

In the case of multiple default routes use:

These examples tested in Mavericks Terminal.app and are specific to OSX only. For example, other *nix versions frequently use ‘eth’ for ethernet/wireless connections, not ‘en’.
This is also only tested with ksh. Other shells may need a slightly different syntax.

Solution no. 4:

I would use something along these lines…

Solution no. 5:

Using System Preferences:

Step 1: Click the Apple icon (at the top left of the screen) and select System Preferences.

Step 2: Click Network.

Step 3: Select your network connection and then click Advanced.

Step 4: Select the TCP/IP tab and find your gateway IP address listed next to Router.

Hope this helps!