

It creates a flashing icon resembling the file you wish to duplicate. It works kind of like Sleep on a Mac, the only difference is that all of your documents are automatically saved.Īnother feature I like is when you tell Lisa to duplicate a file. The same thing happens when you hit the Power Button.Įven if you have 20 documents open and you hit the Power Button, Lisa will save all of them, set them aside, put everything away, and only then turn itself off.Īs soon as you turn Lisa back on, it reopens everything and puts it just like you had it before you turned it off. This would come in handy if someone (like your boss) gave you another disk and told you to check it out.Īnd as soon as you put the previous disk you were working on back in Lisa, it automatically reopens the document(s) you were working on – just as you had them before you ejected the disk. Here is another thing I really like: If you have a document open on a disk and you try to eject that disk, Lisa will save the document(s), close them, and only then eject the disk. Other than the revert feature, there’s absolutely no reason you would ever have to save a document it’s automatic. Say you started working on something last week, and the last time you saved it was two days ago. Lisa keeps track of all of the changes you made since the last time you saved, so every time you set aside your document, it updates it without even asking.īut say you screwed something up in your document? You can simply tell Lisa to revert to the previous version! In fact, the only reason you would ever want to save anything on Lisa is so you can revert to the previous version later on. If you do tell it to save something, it makes a reference file that you can revert to at a later time.

Another nice thing is that you never have to tell Lisa to save something.
