Easier installation (you only have to paste your API key once). Doesn’t really affect you, but the Crabigator will appreciate. Now makes three times less API requests per hour while maintaining the same update frequency. Next Review Time now displays current time (updated every minute) instead of the time obtained from the API request (updated every five minutes) when the next review is available now. Nothing major, but I made a few improvements. Alternatively, you can go to the Properties window of each of the three label Geeklets, uncheck the “Override text:” checkbox, and paste “echo ‘Next Review’”, “echo ‘Lessons’”, and “echo ‘Reviews’” in the command field of each of the three label Geeklets, respectively.Įdit 3 (): Version 2.0. If you have this problem, you can remove the old label Geeklets, download the new zip archive, and re-add the label Geeklets from there (all six other Geeklets are the same as before). The “GeekTool Helper” process that runs the actual Geeklets shouldn’t take anymore than ~20 MB of ram so long as you do this.Įdit 2: Posted a slightly updated version because I noticed the labels (“Next Review”, “Lessons”, and “Reviews”) sometimes disappear. To avoid this problem, restart your system once you’re done adding the Geeklets (and after each time you open the GeekTool app to make changes to your Geeklets). Oh, and because I know someone is going to ask here’s a link to the ダンボー wallpaper: …Įdit: Just found out that the 300 MB ram usage was caused by a memory leak in the GeekTool app. I’m sure there are more elegant ways to do this, but hey it works. I’m a neuroscience student and most of the programming I do involves one-off scripts that are never made public, so please forgive the hackish code. The icons I included are from the Iconic icon set and are licensed under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 licence. Log out and log in or restart your mac (there is a known bug in GeekTool which causes the Geeklets to appear in Mission Control if you don’t do this after having used the GeekTool app to make modifications to your Geeklets). Check the “Automatically Launch at Login” checkbox and close the GeekTool app (but, select the option not to close the Geeklets after the app quits)Ĩ. To the right of the command field, click the “…” button (it’s black and hard to see) and paste your API key after “APIKey=”. In the Properties window, look for the field labelled “Command:”. Then, open the GeekTool application and select the “WaniKaniAPIRequest” Geeklet on your Desktop (it’s the big empty rectangle you should see the name at the top of the Properties window).Ħ. Go to, scroll down, and copy your API key. Double Click every one of the ten *.glet files in the WaniKaniGeekTool folder you just downloaded and click YES each time you are asked if you would like to run the Geeklet.ĥ. Unzip the archive, and move the folder called “WKGeekToolResources” to /Users/Shared/ (If you can’t figure out how to get there, open a Finder window and hold down shift + command + G then, paste “/Users/Shared/” and click Go)Ĥ. Download my GeekTool scripts (version 2.0): ģ. Install GeekTool: (If you aren’t running OS X 10.6 or later, you can download an older version here: )Ģ. Luckily for you, I’ve already taken care of most of the work so you should be able to reproduce the above setup fairly easily.ġ. It is extremely versatile, though perhaps not terribly intuitive if you are unfamiliar with shell scripting. (for example, a link back to their website).For those not familiar with it, GeekTool is a mac application that allows users to display all kinds of information right on the Desktop. The license to see if the designer is requesting attribution This icon can be used for both Personal &Ĭommercial purposes and projects, but please check Converting it to an ICO, JPEG or WebP image format or file type should also be pretty simple (we hope to add that feature to Iconduck soon). If you need this icon available in another format, it should be pretty straight forward to download it as an SVG image file, and then import it into apps like Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, PicMonkey or RelayThat. It's part of the icon set " Flat OSX Icon Set", which has 537 icons in it. It's available to be downloaded in SVG and PNG formats (available in 256, 512, 10 PNG sizes). This open source icon is named "Apps Geektool" and is licensed under the open source CC BY 4.0 license.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |