This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. Larry Tesler, the computer scientist best ...
Google has announced long-omitted support for using keyboard shortcuts to cut, copy, and paste files in Google Drive on the web – but only if you're accessing the service through its Chrome browser.
Google has announced that it’s adding the ability to use keyboard shortcuts to cut, copy, and paste files in Drive, as long as you’re using Chrome. The feature will use th— okay, hold on just a minute ...
Google Drive on the web is finally getting keyboard shortcuts for copy, cut, and paste. This may come as surprise, but you couldn’t already do that on the web client of Google’s cloud file storage ...
Google is updating Drive on the web with useful keyboard shortcuts to make managing your files much simpler. Fortunately, the key combos are pretty standard and align with modern file browsers, but ...
I’m always fascinated that someone designed just about everything you use, no matter how trivial it is. The keyboard you type on, the light switch you turn on, even the faucet handle. They don’t just ...
Computer scientist Larry Tesler, known as the inventor behind the "cut," "copy," and "paste" commands, has died at the age of 74. His contributions to modern technology have made personal computers ...
It’s strange to imagine where we’d be if we didn’t have Larry Tesler’s cut, copy, and paste commands. They’re so rudimentary to modern computer functions, and yet there was a time they didn’t exist.
Computer scientist Larry Tesler, who was an instrumental figure at Apple in the '80s and '90s, died on Monday at the age of 74, according to Apple Insider. Tesler began his career in the '60s as a ...
Larry Tesler, the computer scientist best known for inventing the “cut, copy and paste” commands, died Monday. Xerox, where Tesler previously worked as a researcher, announced his passing on Twitter ...