One geeklet (or what appeared to be one geeklet) was actually comprised of 6 disparate geeklets that had been laid out in a very particular way. Comfortable enough, in fact, that I started feeling friction. I found a lot of shared geeklets on the Geeklets page at .uk and remembered that Brett Terpstra had posted an unsolicited GeekTool showcase recently, so I took a look at both and installed a few geeklets from each.Īfter installing a few from the gallery at .uk and re-creating Terpstra's ' Top CPU Processes' and ' Top RAM Processes' monitors, I found myself pretty comfortable with the process of sharing, installing, and running geeklets. The first thing that I did was look for geeklets that I could use or that would inspire me to create my own. I've had a few spare cycles recently, so I've been messing around with GeekTool.
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