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- “iStat Menus 6 is an incredible update and having used it over the last few days, I can happily recommend it to anyone.” — Preshit Deorukhkar, Beautiful Pixels “If you want to know at a glance what your Mac is up to, it’ll take care of you.” — Jason Snell, Six Colors.
- However, iStat Pro includes 9 different skin colours, so you are sure to find one you like. Control what you see: Flip the widget over to control which sections are shown or hidden. It's even possible to filter out specific disks, network interfaces, temperature or fan sensors, if you’d like. Requirements: OS X.
Installer vuze mac os x 10.6.8; More results for 'Istat for 10.6.8' Additional suggestions for Istat for 10.6.8 by our robot: Free only. It is a configurable widget that lets you monitor your Mac. WhiteClock Free. WhiteClock is a nice white clock that will be placed on the black menubar.
Recently upgraded to OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion) and found that the awesome Dashboard widget iStat Pro made by the fine folks at Bjango wasn’t 100% compatible.
I found a solution on the MacRumors forum. Just make sure you check the settings for the widget, I was thoroughly confused by the settings being changed to sort processes by memory usage. (Problem and solution copy/pasted at the end of the post.)
Copy/paste:
It’s easy to fix iStat Pro processes for Mountain Lion
Steps:
1. Locate your widget, it will be under /Library/Widgets or ~/Library/Widgets
2. Right click it and select: “Show Package Contents”
3. Open Wide.js or Tall.js file in some editor (Wide is for horizontal view, Tall for vertical)
Memory for power mac. Rember includes Memtest OS X in the package so there is no need to manually download and install the memtest. Running Rember will show a table displaying the detected memory on your Mac.
4. Locate the line
Quote:
WideSkinController.prototype.updateProcesses = function(){var _self = this; var exclude = “”; if(p.v(“processes_excludewidgets”) ‘on’) exclude = ” grep -v DashboardClient | “; if(p.v(“processes_sort_mode”) ‘cpu’) widget.system(‘ps -arcwwwxo “pid %cpu command” | egrep “PID|$1” | grep -v grep | ‘ + exclude + ‘ head -7 | tail -6 | awk '{print “<pid>”$1″</pid><cpu>”$2″</cpu><name>”$3,$4,$5″</name></item>”}”, function(data){ _self.updateProcessesOut(data);}); else widget.system(‘ps -amcwwwxo “pid rss command” | egrep “PID|$1” | grep -v grep | ‘ + exclude + ‘ head -7 | tail -6 | awk '{print “<pid>”$1″</pid><cpu>”$2″</cpu><name>”$3,$4,$5″</name></item>”}”, function(data){ _self.updateProcessesOut(data);}); } |
Istat Mac Os
Change “PID|$1” to “PID| $1” (Add space before $ sign)
5. Save the changes
Istats Mac
6. remove widget and re-add it Dashboard, and it should be fixed
Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?p=15332289#post15332289
Now for the minor problem.
Originally Posted by hanshans-supi The fix does not work right for me. It shows some processes, but not with their percentage like i was used to it. Now it show off the memory-usage of the processes. Can someone fix it? Greets Hans |
Did your settings change? Look in the settings under General and make sure Sort processes by is set to CPU usage not Memory usage.
-Kevin
Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?p=15334155#post15334155