"Animate opening applications" bounces applications in the Dock as they're opening. Set the Minimize option to Genie Effect, and then minimize a window while holding down the shift key …very cool, eh? I'll talk about that in the next section. There is also a third effect, the Suck In Effect, that's only available using a third-party utility like TinkerTool. The Genie Effect is very cool, but if you're like me, after the first few times you just want to get the window out of the way so you can get to work. The Genie Effect is a slower, genie-in-the-bottle action, whereas the Scale Effect is more of an immediate action that simply shrinks the window. To see the chosen effect, click the yellow minimize button in any window's title bar. (Unfortunately, if you have multiple monitors, there's no way to move the Dock to a different screen.) The "Minimize using" setting changes the effect you see when a window is minimized to the Dock. The "Position on screen" setting simply places the Dock on the left, right, or bottom edge of the main display. And don't worry-you can use the magnification slider to change it back to a normal size. Change the value to something much bigger, like 384, save your changes, and then quit the Dock (it will relaunch). The next line is the maximum magnification size (enclosed by and ). Open the Dock preference file ( ~/Library/Preferences/) in a text editor and find the line that says largesize. Want to make Dock magnification really big? Turn magnification on in Dock preferences.
An App Service plan in the non-free tier carries a charge, even if no app is running in it.Figure 6.2: A QuickTime movie playing in the Dock When you're ready for the custom domain to point to the target app, remap the domain name.ĭelete the source app and App Service plan.Configure everything else in your target app to be the same as the source app and verify your configuration.If you use a custom domain, bind it preemptively to the target app with asuid.Create an app in a new App Service plan, in the target region.
For information on how to move those resources across regions, see the documentation for the respective services.
For example:Ĭertain resources, such as imported certificates or hybrid connections, contain integration with other Azure services. Identify all the App Service resources that you're currently using.
For example, to take advantage of a new Azure region, to deploy features or services available in specific regions only, to meet internal policy and governance requirements, or in response to capacity planning requirements.Īpp Service resources are region-specific and can't be moved across regions. You might move your resources to another region for a number of reasons. This article describes how to move App Service resources to a different Azure region.