What is that line doing in the program updates? "Since OmniGrowl handles everything, this is a much better solution for GeekTool users than anything currently available (just try it)."
I have OmniGrown AND GeekTool, and they fulfill totally different niches. I don't see OmniGrowl running shell scripts, and nor should it. They're different, and that's good. But the unnecessary and ill-advised jab at GeekTool is pretty unprofessional, and is enough to make me think twice about using OmniGrowl.
OmniGrowl
Growl notifications for iCal, Address Book, iTunes...
Version: 3.7
Ahem.. geektool replacement?
Feedback Type: Commentary
Contributed by: Paradoxial Wednesday, September 23 2009 @ 11:47 AM PDT
Product Platform: MacOSX
Used Product For: Over One Year
Recommend Product: NO
Comments
Ahem.. geektool replacement? - Paradoxial
...I so very badly wish I could delete my original comment. Apparently I wasn't feeling altogether literate at the time I made it.I sincerely apologize, and in fact will be contacting VT requesting them to remove the incorrect comment.
Wednesday, September 23 2009 @ 07:25 PM PDT
Ahem.. geektool replacement? - Wooden Brain
Hi Paradoxial!Very glad to catch your comment relatively early, because you have misunderstood what we meant (which yes, could be clearer.) So let me clarify.
We love GeekTool and have been using it for years. We love GeekTool 3 even more.
The "better solution" we're talking about is specifically how to display iTunes track info and artwork on the desktop. We wrote one of those ourselves a long time ago and published it in WBC iTunes Scripts Collection. Similar solutions have been posted on several blogs, MacOSXHints, etc.
The existing solutions have 3 limitations: 1) They all involve running 2 separate scripts (one for artwork and one for track info), and polling iTunes on a regular basis (several times a minute). This puts a huge tax on iTunes and eventually, in our opinion, makes iTunes unusable and therefore makes this kind of solution not really work. 2) The track info and the artwork is usually out-of-sync. 3) you have to have embedded artwork.
So, what we mean by OmniGrowl being a "much better solution for GeekTool users than anything currently available" is that it handles things differently: 1) OmniGrowl uses the distributed notifications system to be alerted of iTunes track changes, and doesn't need to constantly poll iTunes. 2) one plugin updates GeekTool at the same time, and uses the new AppleScript support in GeekTool to tell it when to refresh. 3) if you have the option to download artwork from the internet on (or even if you don't and OmniGrowl is getting the artwork from iTunes), then OmniGrowl is already caching an image file, so there is no duplication of this task on iTunes or the system.
Beyond that it is really easy to set up. Just rename a provided template and then create two new geeklets in GeekTool with specific names.
So as a GeekTool user too, please just try it and then comment back what you think!
Thanks. (Viva GeekTool)
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Wednesday, September 23 2009 @ 01:07 PM PDT