Screencast: Quicksilver for Beginners
If you’ve heard about Quicksilver but have been too timid to familiarize yourself with it, or to peek under the hood a bit, this screencast is for you!
Perhaps too often, we (as in the collective web) focus our attention on the cutting edge features of Quicksilver. Unfortunately that can make for a steep barrier to entry into this amazingly powerful program. So I wanted to take a step back and show a simple trick or two that makes Quicksilver valuable to the new user (either of Quicksilver, or the Apple platform in general).

To those veterans of our favorite launcher, this screencast may not be much for you, and I do apologize for that. I’ll do my best to expose something new and exciting with Quicksilver in the coming week or two. But for those who really don’t know Quicksilver from a hole in the ground, this aims to serve as a useful [visual] primer on getting started with a life-altering application. (I’m serious about the ‘life-altering’ thing.)
Following a simple but useful function of Quicksilver, I’ll cover the Preferences and various sections within that can help enhance your Quicksilver experience. For those who have followed along with my past screencasts, this isn’t another ‘Setup’ – instead this is aimed at explaining the various functions in Preferences, like Rescanning catalogs, finding information about plugins, and things of that nature.
You can grab this screencast in .mov format directly (below), or you can subscribe to our new TAB Screencasts feed here, or via iTunes.
Quicksilver – The Beginner’s Walkthrough (mov)
20 mins / 138 mb
This is a long one (apologies if it gets repetitive, but I wanted to cater to the new-to-Quicksilver crowd). Please feel free to leave questions below in the comments section, and we’ll do our best to answer them promptly.
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I want QuickSilver on my iPhone. I already think that way (regarding how I use my computer) – I don’t think it can be done with a web-app, though. Give Alcor a real SDK!
Sorry, but what are the names of the icon sets you are using?
This is a good (& up to date) starting point for anyone wanting to get into Quicksilver.
I can see a few sites referencing it in the future.
I’ld like to thank you for this awesome walkthrough! I’ve been relunctant to using QuickSilver because it seemed complex, but I was wrong, now I’m addicted.
Thanks!
Andrew – I’m glad it’s been useful for you. I want to do 1 or 2 more Quicksilver entry screencasts. Just trying to determine what items to demo. Watch for them in the next week or so.
It seems to me that KISS (Keep it simple, stupid) is implied here. Why use all these new to learn key commands when you can access the same crap by double clicking the folder on the desktop? (which, chances are it’d take less time to do so) Unless QS’s sole purpose is to allow the user to enjoy their desktop background to it’s maximum potential and to complicate their computing experience, I find it pretty unnecessary. Maybe theres something I’m missing?
@ David:
I have found that QS simplifies my computing experience more than any single thing – Dock, DragThing, launchers, folder digging, etc. I simply think of what I want – and type a few characters (usually three will do) and there it is: Applications, control panels, people in Address book, my del.icio.us bookmarks, songs, etc. I can launch it or do other stuff with it then.
I find it to be the simplest possible interface to all those things. I find it much more tedious to open a finder window (and dig) or move my mouse to the dock and scroll through a (long, for me) list of apps.
You don’t have to memorize key commands – just one to start (to invoke QS). Pick something that works for you. My hands are always on the keyboard (one, at least), so hitting my QS key and typing is pretty fast. And that’s just scratching the surface of what’s possible…
If you had a race to launch an app between a mouse-driven menu/window and QS, QS would win *every* time.
I came back to the MacOS after I saw this app.
Thanks for this – I’ve just started using QS and have a quick question: is there a way of writing text and sending it (plus automatically saving) to an existing text file (like a to-do list)?
Looking forward to hearing from you and thanks in advance for your time.
DK
@DK Yes you can do this.
(As far as I know it only works with .txt files, but I could be wrong). Make sure you have the Append To… & Prepend To… actions checked in Quicksilver preferences > Actions
Invoke Quicksilver & type . (period) to enter text mode.
Type whatver you want > Tab > Append To… > Tab > TextFile.txt
(Where TextFile is the file you want to add the text to). There also a Prepend To… action
@David
Yea, before I started using Quicksilver & looking into what else it could do I pretty much had the same opinion. I (ignorantly) thought ‘There’s Spotlight so I don’t need Quicksilver’.
But after looking into what it can do, reading the guides, watching the screencasts I’m totally hooked & feel crippled using a computer without it.
I guess if you don’t like it or it doesn’t interest you that’s fine. But if you did take the time to learn some of the powerful features (& get used to them) you’d wonder how you lived without it.
Thanks Jono – really appreciate your time!
Peace
DK