Archive for July, 2007
Forget the Apple Terminal, now you have Quicksilver
Remember I promised I’d show you how to do your basic computer stuff from within Quicksilver? Well, it took me a while but I finally pulled myself together and wrote this tutorial - a beginner’s guide on doing all kinds of nice and useful stuff with Quicksilver.
What is Quicksilver, you ask? I dare you ask this again after reading my articles on Application Launchers - the ultimate geek Power Tools
More practical tips for surviving extremely hot days

Given the major heat wave in Europe these weeks, an extra list of doctor-approved things to do(or not) in hot days is a welcome addition to my previous “heat survival tips“. I hope it’ll help at least a bit to cool you guys off.
- Avoid prolonged exposure to sun between 11 AM - 6 PM.
- Shut the sun-exposed windows and cover them with both curtains and window blinds. Keep them shut for as long as the outside temperature is higher than the inside. Let the cool air flow in the early morning or late night, while the outside temperature is lower.
- Reduce to minimum running electrical apparel - it tends to overheat and, what’s worse, to heat the surrounding air even more. Same goes for the light-bulbs - replace the incandescent ones with fluorescent ones as they greatly reduce the generated heat.
3 tips you probably didn’t know on your Mac Book
Disabling the Trash Can
Sometimes the Trash really stands in your way - for instance, if you have a small capacity USB drive, a memory card or a Windows partition. You want stuff deleted from the Finder to be immediately erased instead of moved into the Trash Can.
To do this you need the Terminal (if you’re a beginner, see our terminal tutorials first). You’ll first need to change directories to the USB drive location - all drives addresses are to be found in the /Volumes directory. Once in the right location, you just need to remove and recreate the Trash folder - see below how:
cd /Volumes/YOURUSBDRIVE
rm -rf .Trashes
touch .Trashes
Easy, right? From now on, whenever you delete something on the drive, OS X will alert you that it will be deleted immediately.
How to view hidden files and folders in Finder?
Still in Terminal, type “defaults write com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles ON” (no quotes). Press Enter.
Next, restart the Finder process - type “killall Finder“.
From now on, in Finder you’ll see all hidden files and folders. Warning, it won’t be very pretty.
To reverse, repeat the same steps but with the first command “defaults write com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles OFF”.
(via applepedia)
Right-clicking with only the trackpad
All new switchers learn pretty soon that in order to right-click on OS X, they need: a. a two-button mouse or b. to press Ctrl while clicking.
Well, Apple laptop owners have a third less-documented choice(I didn’t know about it until recently): tapping the trackpad with two fingers.
If it doesn’t already work for you, then you must enable it: in System Preferences, open the Keyboard & Mouse item and make sure to check the “Tap trackpad using two fingers for secondary click” check box.
(via Ron Miller)
Mac tips - Turn off your Mac’s startup sound
Ever since I bought my sweet white Mac Book, it’s existence has been threatened by a minor yet annoying little thing: the startup sound.
While the startup chime doesn’t bother me a bit, it drives my girlfriend mad, and her threats of throwing the damn thing away have been getting more and more frequent. As any Mac Book user out there knows, there’s no way to change the chime sound or disable it from within the system. Even plugging earphones before booting up fails, and if you don’t want to hear the annoying chime each morning, you’d have to carefully(or automatically) switch off the sound before shutting the computer off.
But all these worries are now gone, as today was my lucky day - randomly browsing macosxhints made me discover the little free application that’s bound to save my laptop’s life.

StartupSound.prefPane 1.1-BETA comes form Arcana Research Japan, is free and available at this link (direct download link here). Being a beta version makes it possibly unstable, but so far it worked out great on my Intel Mac Book.
Top links list for a Productive Desktop

Your computer productivity is directly influenced by the ease with which you are able to launch applications or find, organize and retrieve your internet downloads. A cluttered desktop only makes you lose time and focus trying to find the things you look for among the zillions of icons.
You might remember my article on turning your desktop into a productivity tool which is one of the most popular articles on this blog so far. At the time I wrote it, I was finding it strange that no other productivity blogs had tackled this subject yet. Boy was I wrong - the subject of organizing one’s desktop proves to be a favorite topic of discussion for a lot of productivity-oriented blogs and bloggers. Talk about insufficient research - ![]()
Since the subject of the perfect “productive” desktop is far from being closed, I decided to give you the
Top links list for a more Productive Desktop
- introducing you to the best ideas around the web about setting up your computer desktop for improved productivity.
Can the iPhone get YOUR things done?
Hack the Day is probably the only blog never to have talked about the iPhone. I decided to change this now that the iPhone has launched. Everyone is claiming that it will make their lives more complete and more productive, two justified reasons to pay the price.
But is the iPhone the ultimate productivity tool, as some have been hoping? I take a look into how this device will impact your working style (disclaimer - I wasn’t lucky enough to be born in the iPhone country, so all information below is based on blog reviews and Apple’s documents) and what applications to use for your organizing and productivity purposes.



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