without even enabling Silk, it wreaks havoc on my machine. Merely choosing the Silk pane in system preferences causes my finder to start quitting & relaunching at a rate of about once per second, and Excel and iTunes invariably crash. Most other apps seem to be unaffected. What I liked though was you could drag an app to the Silk window to find out whether it was Cocoa or other. But I have deleted it Can anyone tell me how to know if apps are Carbon, Cocoa, Java, or what? Java apps are usually recognizable by their caveman appearance & sluggishness, but is there a simple terminal command or other little utility or way to determine an app's codebase? thanks, Craig On Feb 12, 2005, at 8:58 PM, PoolMouse wrote: > Eddie Hargreaves <meged at earthlink.net> wrote: > > recommending haxies?! excuse me while i barf... > > don > > don montalvo, nyc > >> There is no built-in way to change the menu font or size. However, >> Silk, one >> of Unsanity's haxies can accomplish this. >> >> http://unsanity.com/haxies/silk >>