Entries Tagged as 'OS X'

QuickLook Plugins

If you have a mac running Leopard (OS X 10.5), you’re probably already familiar with the freaking awesome QuickLook feature. This what’s triggered when you press the spacebar while a file is selected.

I just found out that there are actually plugins for QuickLook to enable you to view even more formats!

Here’s a list of ones that I’ve grabbed so far:

- BetterZipQL: Allows QuickLook of contents within a Zip file
- colorxml: Color formats XML docs
- Folder: View the contents of a selected folder
- QLColorCode: Color formatting of various Code docs

Find a bunch of plugins at QuickLookPlugins.com

To install QuickLook plugins, you should copy the “*.qlgenerator” file into /Library/QuickLook/ or ~/Library/QuickLook/. Note that “*” in the filename will vary based on exactly which QuickLook item you choose to install.

If a QuickLook folder is not present, feel free to create one.

After copying the file into the directory you will need to logout and then back in to your account for it to become active. Alternatively, you can prevent having to logout by running the following command in Terminal:

qlmanage -r

This will force OS X to search /Library/QuickLook and ~/Library/QuickLook for plugins and load them accordingly.

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Nifty Apps for OSX

DocColor: a little while ago I showed you how to change the type of dock in Leopard, well, now there’s a little app that lets you change the color of your dock (DockColor). Looks like all it does is modify a png file, but it does it well =)

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And if you’re looking to change the dock completely, go here: LeopardDocks.com. They have about a bajillion you can download.

Get SQLGrinder to work with MSSQL

Make sure SQLGrinder App is not open when you do this.

1. Download the Microsoft JDBC Driver

Go to the Microsoft JDBC Driver download page:

Get It Here

Follow the link at the bottom of the page to download the Unix version of the JDBC driver (.tar.gz file).

2. Extract the downloaded Archive

You can safely extract the downloaded file with StuffIt Expander. The extracted files are in the folder “sqljdbc_1.0″.

3. Install the JDBC Driver

To install the Microsoft JDBC Driver you have to copy the actual driver file (sqljdbc.jar) from the sqljdbc_1.0/enu folder to your Java classpath (/Library/Java/Extensions).

Don’t create sub-directories in /Library/Java/Extensions (like lib/). The .jar file has to be in the /Library/Java/Extensions folder.

4. Open SQLGrinder

You will now have a Drive labeled ‘MS SQL Server 2005′.

You’re done!

My 20 Favorite Leopard Features

1. Data Detectors in Mail - These things are freaking amazing! It recognizes patterns in human speech (text really) that correlate to dates and when you hover over them, it asks you if you want to create the event in iCal. It also recognizes phone numbers, addresses, and more for inputs into Address Book.

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2. Instant Preview - Not sure what it’s really called, but when you’re browsing the file system (Finder) in any view mode, you can click on a file and just hit the space bar to preview the file. It doesn’t actually open the application. It just loads it into this nice floating window and lets you browse through the pages of a doc, view a movie, listen to an mp3, etc. Awesome!

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3. Spotlight is usable now. A.K.A., I don’t need quicksilver any more. I do miss the quicksilver plugins, but spotlight is nice. Who needs 2 indexers running anyway.

4. The Dock is pretty. And you can change it too.

5. The menu bar is subtly transparent and sleek. Nice =)

6. Mail now has RSS feeds support. This is nice in that it streamlines all my newsfeeds / mail reading into a single app. When you view a feed in Safari, there’s a link on the right side to click and save into Mail.

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7. Finder now has support for “Search For” folders and Shared devices (networked computers with open shares). the Search For folders and items are basically Smart Folders

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8. Finally(!) there’s a Path Bar in finder to show your full path. To turn it on go to View > Show Path Bar

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9. Transparent menu drop-downs are a nice touch and they’ve rounded the corners as well. Overall a nice visual piece.

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10. Time Machine rocks! Best / Easiest backup method out there for any OS! It’s been well advertised, so you know the gist of it, but here’s two things you may not have known: Time Machine will work with a partition on your current drive, and it also can go back in time to restore (certain) application states. So, if you have a laptop (like me), you can’t really rely on an external drive for your backup needs. So I partitioned off a 20gb chunk and dedicated it to Time Machine backups. Then I just excluded the backup of everything but the places that I need backed up =). The only applications that I’ve seen this work for so far are Address Book and Mail.

11. iCal has been improved, and finally displays the correct date on the dock icon even when the app is closed. WTF took so long on that one?! (The little blue dots under an app signify that it’s launched. See the mail app below)

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12. iChat has been upgraded a lot and is a satisfactory replacement for Adium if you don’t mind no skinning. The Video Chat thing with the Chroma Key-esque background thing doesn’t really work too well (see below). But it’s fun to play around with.

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13. Spaces. I laughed my ass off when I heard Jobs pitch Spaces as this revolutionary thing that linux has been doing for about 10+ years. But it’s implemented very well, helps out a lot, and has that nice Apple functionality that you’d expect. Definitely a plus, and helps out a lot.

14. Web Clips are neat. When you’re browsing safari, you can take little clips of a webpage that you’re looking at and turn it into a dashboard widget. The part that I like is that the selector tool is smart. It will snap to elements of the webpage. Check out the widget I made below of the newest forum topics on BodyMod.org:

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15. The Dictionary App is pretty useful now. It has an nifty autocomplete feature, and it lets you query Apple tech terms and Wikipedia.

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16. The Preview app is a lot cooler now too. It will let you do some basic image editing (Resize, crop, etc) and save to various formats. Great when you need to to some quick edits to an image to post to a blog =)

17. A lot of the Utilities have been updated with some new features and icons. Some that I’ve noticed are Activity Monitor, Airport Utility, Boot Camp Assistant (now not beta), Directory (new), Network Utility, ODBC Administrator Utility, Podcast Capture, and Terminal (quite a few updates in this one, including “Themes”)

18. The coverflow view in Finder is pretty cool. For things like documents, movies, and web pages, it’ll actually show the contents rendered on the icon.

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19. The Network Preference Pane in System Configuration is a lot nicer. Makes working with your settings a lot more manageable.

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20. The spring loaded dock icon thingies are pretty cool. The fan view is neat, but not as helpful as the grid view (shown below). You can choose which one you want it to show as. To add new ones, you just drag a folder onto the dock. I also like that it shows thumbnails of everything in the grid view. Even documents and web pages. What I don’t like about it is that the icon on top (on the dock) for each item is the last thing that was put in it. So it makes it a little difficult to distinguish which folder is for what.

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Well, those are my 20 favorite things about OS X 10.5 Leopard. I really don’t see how anyone can use a PC anymore (this coming from a guys who’s been a pc fanatic since he was 8). This just blows all other operating systems out of the water. Vista is such a joke (a bad one at that) compared to this. If you’re a mac user, you need this update. It’s so worth it and will make you all giddy inside playing with it =)

DockStar

Another OSX app that I like a lot. Mail is a great email client, but if you’re like me, you’ll have a lot of different folders and rules that filter your mail from different accounts into different folders. The problem with Mail’s notification is that it only monitors the Inbox and shows the red star with the amount of new messages for that folder only. Dockstar let’s you have multiple notification stars that you can assign to all kinds of stuff.

Check out the free demo

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Little Snitch

This is a little program that prevents call-homes (outbound connections) from your mac. It monitors all programs trying to make a connection from your computer and alerts you to see if you want to allow it or not. It’s all rule based and works perfectly. Recently, they’ve release the beta version (2.0) and I just installed it. Great improvement. I also like the notification windows:

Get Little Snitch

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Changing the Dock in Leopard

just found out that you can change the look and feel of the dock in OS X 10.5 (Leopard). Here’s what it looks like out of the box:

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I do like it, but I’m also a little attached to this “other” version:

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Just nice to know that you have an option =)

To change the doc to the other version, open up Terminal (Applications > Utilities) and type in these commands:

defaults write com.apple.dock no-glass -boolean YES
killall Dock

To change it back to the shelf one, just change the YES to NO:

defaults write com.apple.dock no-glass -boolean NO
killall Dock

‘killall Dock’ resets the dock.

Important Tiger to Leopard Notes!

If you’re doing a clean install from Tiger to Leopard on OS X, obviously make a backup of your current system. There’s a gotcha though. Your Address Book and iCal data have to be backed up separately! For address book, open up the app and then do an Export of all the data. For iCal, DO NOT BACKUP DATABASE! You have to individually select each category in your iCal and do an EXPORT of them to an ICS file one at a time.

Found this out the hard way… thankfully I had another mac to import my old data and export it for me. For some reason, iCal and Address Book in Leopard don’t read / can’t import the Tiger files.

Fucking Leopard Man…

Welp, I’ve upgraded my laptop / main computer to OS X 10.5 Leopard, and I must say that it’s a great improvement. Lots of fun new toys and features. I have to give it to the apple design team. They’re amazing. Also, check out the size of the image:

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;o)

As I find new things that I like about it, I may post them here. Could be OS X overload though.

How to Disable Spotlight in OS X

Frst modify /etc/hostconfig to read:

SPOTLIGHT=-NO-

Then to get rid of the existing index, run these two commands from
Terminal:

mdutil -i off /
mdutil -E /

The first command disables indexing on the boot volume, and the second
erases the existing template. You can then use Activity Monitor to kill any
mds or mdimport processes or else just reboot. Futzing with permissions
will probably break OS updates that try to update files in the zeroed-out
directories and of course won’t survive a repair-permissions run.
If you later change your mind and decide you want Spotlight after all, it’s
easy to reactivate:

SPOTLIGHT=-YES-

in /etc/hostconfig, run in Terminal:

mdutil -i on /

and reboot.