Delete iTunes in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion

Sep 13, 2011 - 14 Comments

Delete iTunes from Mac OS X

If you’ve been using the iTunes betas and want to downgrade back to a stable iTunes build, or you just want to remove iTunes for another reason, here are two ways to delete the app under Mac OS X 10.7: the easy way using the GUI, and a quick way for advanced users using the command line.

Delete iTunes

Remove iTunes Using the Finder

  • Quit iTunes
  • Navigate to /Applications and locate iTunes app
  • Select iTunes and hit Command+i to “Get Info” on the application
  • Click on the Arrow next to “Sharing & Permissions” to reveal the access panel
  • Click on the lock icon and authenticate with your administrator password
  • Under “Privilege” set both instances of “everyone” to “Read & Write”
  • Close out the Get Info window and drag iTunes to the Trash, and then empty the trash

Remember that without another version of iTunes available for Mac OS X to use, you will likely encounter errors in various places, plus it will make it impossible to sync and backup iOS hardware like an iPhone or iPad. Basically, if you don’t have a good reason to be removing iTunes, such as to downgrade or ditch the colorized version, than you should keep it around.

Delete iTunes via the Terminal

This is a quicker method for users who are comfortable with the command line:

  • Launch the Terminal (located in /Applications/Utilities/
  • Type the following commands to kill iTunes:
  • killall iTunes

  • Now kill the Helper process:
  • killall "iTunes Helper"

  • Now to delete the actual application, use this command:
  • sudo rm -rf /Applications/iTunes.app/

  • Authenticate the sudo command, note there is no warning for the actual deletion of the app

As usual, be careful with the rm command because if you mistype the file path, you will delete other things without warning. This is why we recommend the command line for more advanced users only.

Note: this does not delete your apps, backups, books, media, or the iTunes library, which is located at ~/Music/iTunes/ (unless you moved it elsewhere)

By William Pearson - iTunes, Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 14 Comments

iPhone 5 Launch Date October 15, iCloud & iOS 5 on October 10?

Sep 13, 2011 - 6 Comments

iPhone 5 & iOS 5 Who better to spill the potential launch date of iPhone 5 than an executive of a leading telecom company? That’s exactly what Stéphane Richard, CEO of France Telecom, seems to have done at a conference in France today, with the following:

“If I believe what we heard, the iPhone 5 [is] out Oct. 15,”

Assuming a corresponding US launch, the US release date may be October 14. This little quote comes from Mac4ver, where it was presumably overheard by whatever crowd was attending the BFM Business conference.

October 15 (or 14) corresponds well with past reports of a mid-October release, but it is also possible the France Telecom CEO is only repeating speculation from news agencies.

Apple typically releases new software prior to the launch of new iOS hardware, so the above date corresponds well with some separate information regarding iOS 5.

iOS 5 & iCloud to Arrive on October 10?

Separately, AppleInsider has learned that AppleCare specialists are anticipating a significant increase in call volume related to iOS, possibly in anticipation of iCloud and iOS. This corresponds with a tip we received earlier in the month that Apple has been ramping up hiring at call centers for iCloud and iOS specialists.

Apple has only mentioned ‘Fall’ as a vague iOS 5 release date, but new information points to a GM build arriving at the end of the month for a launch early in October.

By Matt Chan - iPhone, News - 6 Comments

Make iPhone’s iOS Look Like Mac OS X Lion

Sep 13, 2011 - 19 Comments

Mac OS X Theme for iPhone

We’ve shown you how to make Mac OS X look like iOS, but what about going the other way? If using a jailbreak doesn’t freak you out, this winterboard theme makes an iPhone look and behave freakishly similar to Mac OS X Lion and includes a variety of features that are borrowed from OS X 10.7, including:

  • OS X Lion style login screen
  • Mac OS X style Dock
  • Usable Finder menu bars
  • Draggable Finder windows that contain your apps and data
  • LaunchPad shows all your apps
  • Stacks for quick app launching from the Dock
  • Mission Control gives quick access to social apps and Dashboard widgets
  • Safari is reskinned to look like OS X

Mac OS X Lion iPhone Theme

Called “OS X Lion Ultimatum”, it may be one of the most advanced iOS themes that’s available out there. It’s currently in beta but will cost $3.50 and require Dreamboard and a jailbreak.

Update: Here’s how to install OS X Ultimatum on the iPhone:

Open Cydia

Tap Manage Sources

Tap Edit, then Add, then add source fnetdesigns.com/cydia/repo

Go to the Changes section and install Theme Outlet

Close Cydia, go to your home screen, and open Theme Outlet

Browse for OS X Ultimatum and download it from there

Open up Dreamboard, browse for the OS X Lion Ultimatum theme, and install it.

You can follow development over at MyMyi Forums but it should be released soon.

Screenshots don’t do it as much justice, be sure to watch the two videos embedded below to get a full grasp on how convincing the theme is.

Read more »

By William Pearson - Customize, iPhone, Mac OS - 19 Comments

Colors is a Free Color Picker Tool to Replace DigitalColor Meter in Mac OS X Lion

Sep 12, 2011 - 14 Comments

Color Picker tool for Mac OS X Lion

Apple’s Digital Color Meter utility took a turn for the worse in Mac OS X Lion, inexplicably removing the ability to view color values in commonly used formats like hex. This is a pain for graphic and web designers, and nobody but Apple knows why they removed that feature, but thankfully there’s a handful of free apps out there to pick up the slack.

Colors is the app of choice I’ll go with because it’s tiny, simple, and free, which is basically the opposite of most App Store choices. Much like the classic DigitalColor Meter, you just launch the app, click the magnifying glass, select your color, and select the output you want copied to your clipboard.

Download Colors Now (direct download link) or visit the developers website

The apps UI is slightly outdated but does the job in Mac OS X 10.7, and for free we can’t complain much. If you’re fed up with Lions new and unimproved Digital Color Meter, get it.

By William Pearson - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 14 Comments

Change the Text & Icon Size of the Mac OS X Finder Window Sidebar

Sep 12, 2011 - 8 Comments

Change Text Size of the Mac Finder Windows Sidebar

The font size of the Mac Finder window sidebar is customizable, allowing you to adjust to a larger or smaller font size of both the text and icons found in the Finder sidebars of OS X.

If you’ve been busy customizing the Favorites folders and colorizing the Finder sidebar icons, you might want to change the font and icon size of that sidebar text while you’re at it. This is possible in all semi new versions of OS X, but oddly enough, this isn’t in the “Finder Preferences” or “View Options” where you might expect to find it, and instead the option to toggle sizes is in the general System Preferences.

Read more »

By William Pearson - Customize, Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 8 Comments

iOS 5 GM Release Due End of September

Sep 12, 2011 - 6 Comments

iOS 5 GM

Apple is planning on having iOS 5 GM provided to it’s overseas suppliers sometime during the week of September 23 to September 30, which is in line with the only publicly announced “fall” release date specified by Apple. The GM build, which stands for Golden Master, will be then be preinstalled on all iPads, iPod touch, and iPhone models, including whatever the next-gen iOS devices happen to be.

This information comes from a reputable analyst who supplied a research note to AppleInsider, which also reemphasizes that next month will be the public release of the next iPhone:

A release of iOS 5 to assemblers the week of Sept. 23 means its likely finalized hardware units for the new iPhone and iPod touch will begin to ship at the end of September. With an estimated 10 to 12 days for shipping, the two new devices are likely to be available by mid-October

Releasing the GM at the end of this month would also give app developers plenty of time to ensure compatibility with the finalized version of iOS 5. The current iOS 5 dev release is beta 7, which is considerably more stable and speedy than prior versions.

iOS 5 adds over 200 new features to the platform and has significant ties to Apple’s upcoming iCloud service, which is expected to launch alongside the new mobile operating system.

By Matt Chan - iPad, iPhone, News, Rumor - 6 Comments

An Insiders Look at Apple’s Secretive iPad Testing Procedures

Sep 11, 2011 - 9 Comments

First iPad Leaked Photo

Apple’s secrecy is the stuff of legends, and if you’ve ever wondered how Apple went about keeping the iPad a secret prior to it’s launch, this story from BusinessInsider is quite interesting.

Relayed from an anonymous but successful developer who worked with the iPad prior to the the products official launch, it’s a fascinating look at the efforts Apple goes through to keep a product under wraps:

Now that it’s over a year, I can talk about it.
I was probably the sixth person to get an iPad.
We got two of them flown out.
The criteria was that we had to have a room with no windows. They changed the locks on the door.
Three developers and I were the only people allowed to go in the room. Apple needed the names and social security numbers of the people who had access.
Apple needed to be able to drill a hole in the desk and chain the devices to desk. They used those bicycle cables.
They had these custom frames built around them so we couldn’t even tell what the iPads looked like. We could plug into them so we could code to them and we could touch the screen and play with that, but we couldn’t see the form factor.
Then they took pictures of the wood grain. If any pictures leaked out, they could trace it back to which desk they came from.
I wasn’t allowed to tell our CEO. I wasn’t allowed to tell anybody anything about what we were doing. I couldn’t even tell my wife. She was like, “You’re going to get fired if this doesn’t work.”
I hadn’t thought about that but she was probably right.
Luckily, it worked out very well.

The heavily masked image at the top came from Engadget a few days prior to the official iPad unveiling in January 2010, and is likely an accuruate representation of the custom frame that masked the iPads appearance in the developers tale.

Stories like this really make you wonder what Apple is currently cooking up somewhere in some dark window-less room…

By Matt Chan - Fun, iPad, News - 9 Comments

iPhone 5 to be Offered in Black & White, 16GB & 32GB Models?

Sep 11, 2011 - 6 Comments

iPhone 5 references on a Vodafone product page

iPhone 5 may be available in both black and white colors, and be offered at the same 16GB and 32GB capacities as iPhone 4, if a product listing on UK’s Vodafone is to be believed. AppleInsider discovered the product page for a signal booster which makes direct references to four distinct models; “iPhone 5 32GB White”, “iPhone 5 16GB White”, “iPhone 5 32GB Black”, and “iPhone 5 16GB Black”.

It could be presumptive or simply a typo, but the iPhone 5 language has since been removed from the listing, which also references current iPhone 4, 3GS, and 3G models. It would not be surprising for both black and white iPhone 5’s to be available from the get-go, but many rumors have anticipated, or hoped for, a 64GB iPhone model, the necessity of which may be questionable thanks to iCloud.

The next-gen iPhone is expected to be released in October.

By Matt Chan - iPhone, News, Rumor - 6 Comments

Mac Setups: Backlit iMac 27″ & iPad 2

Sep 10, 2011 - 19 Comments

backlit iMac 27"

This great reader submitted setup comes from recent Mac switcher Brian D and features an iMac 27″ that is backlit with some Ikea LED strip lighting, an iPad 2, and an external 18″(?) display atop the iPads box. All of the screens are running the classic Flip clock screensaver, Fliqlo, which is one of my personal favorites. Elsewhere you’ll spot an iPhone, a retro cell phone, Apple’s classic wireless keyboard, Magic Trackpad, and Magic Mouse, but few cords thanks to a customized Ikea desk with grommets drilled to hide all the cables.

iMac & iPad with flip clock screensavers

Congrats on the switch to Mac and thanks for sending in this great setup Brian!

You can submit your own Mac setups to: osxdailycom@gmail.com

By William Pearson - Mac Setups - 19 Comments

Change the iPhones Default Root Password

Sep 10, 2011 - 2 Comments

Change the iPhone Default Root Password

If you’re going to run something like OpenSSH or MobileTerminal on your iPhone or iOS device so that you can SSH in to it, you’ll want to change the root password for obvious security reasons. Without doing this, anyone can use the default ‘alpine’ password and connect to the hardware, assuming they know an SSH server is running and have the devices LAN IP address.

Note: this only matters for users who have jailbroken an iOS devices and then are running an active SSH server like MobileTerminal. This is not a necessary procedure for other iPhone or iPad users because no server runs open by default and there is therefore no security risk.

  • Launch the Terminal or your preferred SSH client, find the iOS IP address, and connect to the iPhone using SSH with:
  • ssh root@device.ip.address

  • Enter the default password when asked, it is: alpine
  • After you are logged in, type:
  • passwd

  • Provide a new password, hit return, and confirm the new password when asked

That will cover the root password, but to be safe you’ll also want to change the ‘mobile’ users password as well, you can do this by typing:

passwd mobile

Again you’ll want to enter and confirm the new password.

When finished, you can log out of the iOS device by typing “exit”.

The video below walks through the simple process of changing the root passwords by way of SSH:

This is demonstrated on an iPhone 5 with iOS 6.1, but it applies to all other iOS devices and versions.

By William Pearson - Command Line, iPhone, Tips & Tricks - 2 Comments

Plunder the Caribbean in Crimson: Steam Pirates, a Great Free Game for iPad

Sep 9, 2011 - 1 Comment

Crimson Steam Pirates for iPad

Looking for a fun game to play this weekend on the iPad? Grab Crimson: Steam Pirates, an action-strategy game where you can battle through a series of pirate voyages with over a dozen different boats, subs, and airships. The turn-based game is getting raving reviews which isn’t too shocking considering it’s coming from Bungie, the creators of the Halo franchise and Marathon. Here’s the games description from iTunes App Store:

In Crimson: Steam Pirates, plumes of black smoke fill the blue Caribbean sky as Thomas Blood’s pirate fleet steams ahead—over, above, and below the waves. On the surface, ships bristle with swivel cannons and lightning guns. Above, zeppelins drip with incendiary bombs. And below, silent and deadly, submarines stalk their targets, torpedoes at the ready.

Command your fleet and your Steampunk crew using an elegant action interface. Crimson: Steam Pirates’ turn-based gameplay provides an addicting mixture of strategy and action as you anticipate your enemies’ moves and counter them, luring them into a deadly hail of weapons fire while uncovering the mystery brewing in the Caribbean.

Crimson: Steam Pirates for iPad – free download on the iOS App Store

The only thing surprising here is that it’s free, but you can buy additional levels for $1.99 as an in-app purchase if you beat the first eight.

Crimson Steam Pirates for iPad

By Paul Horowitz - Games, iPad - 1 Comment

Share Adobe Photoshop Between Mac OS X 10.7 Lion & 10.6 Snow Leopard

Sep 9, 2011 - 6 Comments

Photoshop in Mac OS X

If you dual boot Mac OS X 10.6 and 10.7 then you may have noticed that some apps installed in one OS don’t necessarily work in the other. Some of these are because of 10.7 Lion specific features or Rosetta, but others throw random errors that don’t make much sense. Case in point: Adobe Photoshop.

Launching Photoshop installed within Snow Leopard from Lion, you get the nondescript “Error 6” telling you to reinstall Photoshop. Instead of installing PS on both partitions, you can skirt this error by using a symbolic link to access the 10.6 installations App Support folder. This will save disk space and the hassle of managing multiple Creative Suite installations.

From Mac OS X Lion:

  • Quit Photoshop
  • Launch the Terminal (/Applications/Terminal)
  • Enter the following command – this assumes your OS X 10.6 drive is called “Macintosh HD” be sure to change that if it’s not:
  • sudo ln -s /Volumes/Macintosh\ HD/Library/Application\ Support/Adobe /Library/Application\ Support/Adobe

  • Relaunch Photoshop – you’ll get a new error message, choose “Do Not Update”
  • Do not update Photoshop

  • Click “OK” at the next error screen and enjoy full Photoshop access

This is great tip comes from Nate Stedman, the same guy who brought us the Shake-To-Undo Mac app.

Hopefully an update to Photoshop will prevent the need for this in the near future.

Disembodied iPhone Hand Case is the Weirdest iPhone Accessory Ever

Sep 9, 2011 - 13 Comments

iPhone hand case

From time to time we like to post some unusual or fun stuff, but this is really out there. A Japanese manufacturer has created what has to be the creepiest iPhone case in existence, it’s a disembodied hand that you have to hold in order to use the iPhone. WTF. As if that concept wasn’t strange enough, the sales pictures are even more peculiar, like this guy putting a wedding ring onto the iPhones hand and cuddling it to his face:

Disembodied Hand iPhone Case

I’m not sure if these are intended to be a joke or are serious, but if you actually want one they run about $65, or ¥5000, and can be ordered through Rakuten.co.jp.

More (weird) pictures below:
Read more »

By Paul Horowitz - Fun, iPhone - 13 Comments

Automatically Customize Mac OS X with a Bash Script: 27 Defaults Write Commands, custom .aliases, .bash_profile, etc

Sep 9, 2011 - 8 Comments

Bash script to customize many aspects of Mac OS X

If you’re an advanced user and setting up a new Mac, you probably customize the OS with a ton of defaults write commands and .alias adjustments. These are things you can either enter manually, use an easy tool like LionTweaks, or check out this new great script from GitHub called .osx.

Note: this is obviously geared towards more advanced users who are comfortable with the command line and understand what changes they are making. Read the full article to see if these adjustments are right for you. If any of this seems confusing, you probably shouldn’t be making these changes or at least using this method, and the aforementioned LionTweaks utility may be a better fit. Proceed at your own risk.

Option 1) The Full Suite: customize .bash_profile, .bash_prompt, .aliases, git, and Mac OS X with defaults writes

If you want to make a ton of settings adjustments to .bash_profile, .aliases, .gitconfig, and all of the below defaults write commands, you can use this git command in the Terminal to do everything. Before jumping into this one, it’d be a good idea to review the files yourself to make sure the changes are things you want.

git clone https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles.git && cd dotfiles && ./bootstrap.sh

The .aliases file is pretty useful, but includes some commands like ngrep that are not preinstalled by default, so you’ll need homebrew or otherwise to install those.

Option 2) The defaults write changes to Mac OS X only

If you’re not interested in all of the terminal adjustments and aliases, you can just also just get the .osx file from this link

In either case, after git is finished or you have grabbed the .osx file yourself, you can execute the script with:

./.osx

This will activate all of the commands listed below at once. We’ve covered just about all of these before but having them in a centralized location and easily writable from a bash script is very useful when you’re setting up a new Mac.

Option 3: Selectively customizing OS X by entering the defaults write commands yourself

Here’s the full list of defaults write commands that are contained within the .osx file, review this before launching the script or just pick and choose which ones you want to use by putting them into the Terminal:

# Enable full keyboard access for all controls (e.g. enable Tab in modal dialogs)
defaults write NSGlobalDomain AppleKeyboardUIMode -int 3

# Enable the 2D Dock
defaults write com.apple.dock no-glass -bool true

# Disable menu bar transparency
defaults write -g AppleEnableMenuBarTransparency -bool false

# Expand save panel by default
defaults write -g NSNavPanelExpandedStateForSaveMode -bool true

# Expand print panel by default
defaults write -g PMPrintingExpandedStateForPrint -bool true

# Disable shadow in screenshots
defaults write com.apple.screencapture disable-shadow -bool true

# Enable highlight hover effect for the grid view of a stack (Dock)
defaults write com.apple.dock mouse-over-hilte-stack -bool true

# Enable spring loading for all Dock items
defaults write enable-spring-load-actions-on-all-items -bool true

# Disable press-and-hold for keys in favor of key repeat
defaults write -g ApplePressAndHoldEnabled -bool false

# Disable auto-correct
defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSAutomaticSpellingCorrectionEnabled -bool false

# Disable window animations
defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSAutomaticWindowAnimationsEnabled -bool false

# Disable disk image verification
defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages skip-verify -bool true
defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages skip-verify-locked -bool true
defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages skip-verify-remote -bool true

# Automatically open a new Finder window when a volume is mounted
defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages auto-open-ro-root -bool true
defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages auto-open-rw-root -bool true

# Avoid creating .DS_Store files on network volumes
defaults write com.apple.desktopservices DSDontWriteNetworkStores -bool true

# Disable Safari’s thumbnail cache for History and Top Sites
defaults write com.apple.Safari DebugSnapshotsUpdatePolicy -int 2

# Enable Safari’s debug menu
defaults write com.apple.Safari IncludeDebugMenu -bool true

# Remove useless icons from Safari’s bookmarks bar
defaults write com.apple.Safari ProxiesInBookmarksBar “()”

# Disable send and reply animations in Mail.app
defaults write com.apple.Mail DisableReplyAnimations -bool true
defaults write com.apple.Mail DisableSendAnimations -bool true

# Disable Resume system-wide
defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSQuitAlwaysKeepsWindows -bool false

# Enable Dashboard dev mode (allows keeping widgets on the desktop)
defaults write com.apple.dashboard devmode -bool true

# Reset Launchpad
rm ~/Library/Application\ Support/Dock/*.db

# Show the ~/Library folder
chflags nohidden ~/Library

# Disable local Time Machine backups
sudo tmutil disablelocal

# Kill affected applications
for app in Safari Finder Dock Mail; do killall “$app”; done

# Fix for the ancient UTF-8 bug in QuickLook (http://mths.be/bbo)
echo “0x08000100:0” > ~/.CFUserTextEncoding

If you’re making manual changes, many of these will require either the Finder, Dock, or other applications to be relaunched before they are activated. This is generally handled through the script with the second to last command (“Kill affected applications”) but with so many changes being made, it may be easier to just reboot your Mac to insure everything is working properly.

Thanks to Brian for sending this in!

By William Pearson - Command Line, Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 8 Comments

Sprint iPhone 5 to Offer Unlimited Data Plan

Sep 9, 2011 - 2 Comments

Sprint iPhone 5

Sprint will be the USA’s only cell provider to offer unlimited data plans with the upcoming iPhone 5. This latest news come from Bloomberg, who also confirms the mid-October release date:

Sprint, the third-largest U.S. wireless carrier, plans to begin selling the device in mid-October under a deal with Apple for the next model, the iPhone 5, said the people, who wouldn’t be identified because the plans aren’t public. Becoming the country’s only operator to offer the device with unlimited data service for a flat fee may help Sprint draw customers from AT&T and Verizon Wireless, which already carry the phone, they said.

Pricing for the iPhone 5 unlimited data plans remains to be seen, but Sprint currently offers three different unlimited data packages ranging from $69.99/mo for unlimited data and messaging but 450 minutes, up to $99.99 per month for unlimited everything – data, SMS, and minutes. If Sprint was to maintain these price points for iPhone customers, they would be the most competitively priced iPhone plans offered to US customers.

Sprint Unlimited Data Plans

On the other side of the data situation is Verizon and AT&T, who have long canceled unlimited data plans and are instead raising rates while reducing data limits, leaving only those grandfathered into the unlimited data plans to still have access to them. Sprint offering unlimited data and cheaper plans could very well draw a significant amount of users to their network.

Rumors also persist that pre-orders for iPhone 5 will become available prior to the official release next month, alongside iOS 5, iCloud, and the cheaper iPhone 4S.

By Matt Chan - iPhone, News - 2 Comments

Share Files from Mac OS X to Windows PC’s Easily

Sep 8, 2011 - 41 Comments

Mac to Windows File Sharing If you have a mixed network of Mac and Windows PC’s, chances are good that you’ll be wanting to move files between the two operating systems. The easiest way to share files from Mac OS X to Windows is to enable Samba support for a given user account on the Mac. This tutorial will how to share files between Mac and Windows PC this way.

Samba (SMB) may have a funny name but it’s essentially just Mac OS X to Windows file sharing support. Because it’s not required by all Mac users or for Mac-to-Mac sharing, it’s actually a separate unique sharing option within Mac OS X File Sharing panel, and enabling it allows a Windows PC to connect to the Mac without any additional software. Let’s cover exactly how to enable this feature, and then how to connect to a shared Mac from a networked Windows PC so that you can swap files back and forth with ease.

Read more »

By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 41 Comments

Customize LaunchPad Folders with Emoji

Sep 8, 2011 - 3 Comments

custom LaunchPad folder name with Emoji

You may know by now that Mac OS X Lion has Emoji support, which is easily accessible in most applications. This brings a wide range of icons and emoticons to the Mac, and some of them are perfect to customize the appearance of LaunchPad folder names. Here’s how:

  • Open TextEdit and then hit Command+Option+T to bring up the ‘Special Character’ tool
  • Select “Emoji” from the list on the left and then select a sub category, find an emoticon or icon you want to use and double-click it to make it appear in the blank TextEdit window
  • Highlight and copy the emoji icon in TextEdit so that it is stored within the clipboard
  • Hit F4 or whatever key you remapped to open LaunchPad
  • Click to open the folder you want to edit, then double-click on the folder name to make changes
  • Use your mouse cursor or the arrow keys to go to the beginning of the word, and hit Command+P to paste the Emoji icon into the folder name
  • Emoji icons in LaunchPad folder names

  • Click out of the folder to set the change

Removing the emoji icon from the folder name is the same as deleting any other character. This is actually an older tip from the iOS world but LaunchPad and iOS’s SpringBoard are so similar that it works in Lion.

Emoji Folders in OS X Lion LaunchPad

These Emoji icons tend to look their best on larger screens mostly because the LaunchPad icons are larger, something that nobody has yet figured out how to control independently – although the LaunchPad icons are universally larger in Mac OS X 10.7.2 developer betas, there is still no way to adjust the size.

Enjoy this? Check out more LaunchPad tips.

By William Pearson - Customize, Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 3 Comments

Enable Element Inspector in the Mac App Store

Sep 7, 2011 - 5 Comments

Mac App Store element inspector

The Mac App Store has a hidden element inspector that lets you view the source of any page or element drawn within the App Store, letting you extract text or images, and even enter your own code into the console (which can lead to all sorts of fun things). This is probably most useful for web and app developers, but anyone with some curiosity might get a kick out of this feature too.

To enable the Mac App Store’s element inspector, quit out of the App Store and then launch the Terminal. Enter the following defaults write command:

defaults write com.apple.appstore WebKitDeveloperExtras -bool true

Hit Return and then relaunch the App Store. You can now right-click to “Inspect Element” on anything, just like you would in Safari through the developer DOM inspector tool.

Inspect Element in the Mac App Store

As you may have guessed, this works because the Mac App Store is basically just a WebKit wrapper for a website.

There isn’t much reason to disable this feature because it’s only activated by a right-click, but if you want to, that defaults write command is:

defaults write com.apple.appstore WebKitDeveloperExtras -bool false

By William Pearson - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 5 Comments

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