These icons actually represent folders themselves. The icons that you won’t find in the Applications folder are the ones on the right side of the Dock. What If You Can’t Find the Missing Icon in the Applications Folder? Simply drop the icon where you want, and voila – it has been restored. You can go across the Dock and choose where you want to place your missing icon. Do not release the icon until the icons on your Dock have moved by one place, creating space for your missing icon.Once you have found it, click on its icon and drag it to the Dock.That’s where you will find all of the applications that are installed on your Mac computer. Navigate to the Applications folder and click on it.In other words, you have to find the missing program on your computer, drag it, and drop it in the Dock. The easiest way to restore your missing icon is by reversing the process that led to its disappearance. The following methods will show you how to restore them. The icons that you see on your Dock are actually all just shortcuts. The program is still installed and you can still find its icon. In other words, maybe the E6 will prove a more significant device in Nokia's bottom line that many would have believed?ĭata points welcome from your own travels.First and foremost, you need to know that the program whose icon is missing isn’t gone from your computer. ![]() ![]() In other words, the same two huge manufacturers and smartphone platforms which are struggling in terms of financials and market share are also the only two that are active in this form factor, one which will (I suspect) remain popular for a far longer time. And, perhaps significantly, Nokia (with Symbian) and RIM (with Blackberry) are the only two smartphone players in this space - Android really, really doesn't scale down to this form factor and as for Apple, we all know what a certain Mr Jobs thinks of 'all this plastic'. So from my own observations, it seems that the Qwerty candybar form factor is very much alive and well - whatever the size-obsessed tech press would have you believe. Will the E6 sell as well as the E71 (and, to a lesser extent, the E72)? Nokia has had a big foot in this market since the E71's success and the E6's introduction, with many of the advantages of capacitive multi-touch but with all the 'pros' of the Qwerty candybar form factor, means that Nokia will continue to play a part here. Certainly, when mobile, you can't guarantee that both of your hands will be free, you want a certain level of robustness, you want a certain level of insensitivity to unintentional knocks, all situations where pure touchscreen phones have issues. However much the fashion seems to be for ever-growing device sizes to accommodate ever-larger touch displays, it seems that, for practical on-the-go access, at least, the likes of the Blackberry Curve remain as popular as ever. The fascinating bit is that 'qwerty candybars' (or 'qwerty slabs') were almost as popular. The fascinating bit here isn't that full-face touchscreens were most popular - this is just about the only form factor you'll see being pushed and adored by the tech media over the last couple of years, so no surprise here.
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