I'm on OS X 10.8.2, on a Retina MAcbook, and I want to know where the drop shadows are mostly. Does anyone know? :c
I'm on OS X 10.8.2, on a Retina MAcbook, and I want to know where the drop shadows are mostly. Does anyone know? :c
Where the drop shadows are mostly what?
It's possible the drop shadows are rendered on the fly and aren't part of any graphic.
It's possible the drop shadows are rendered on the fly and aren't part of any graphic.
God I hope not. :/
If that is the case, do you know of any command to disable them?
I'm pretty sure that this is the case, because I remember way back (like before OS X Tiger I think) there was a hack that disabled window drop shadows, because it used CPU power. Its almost a silly thought now
Can't remember what that hack was... though if I can it will probably end up being PPC only. You may be able to google it though...
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That being said, if you look in the dock.app there is drop shadow for icons etc, so its also possible that there is an image...
Yeah, I saw that app when I googled a minute ago, it's for like OS X 10.2 :O
umm, the way that page was written, made it sound like Apple is applying the drop shadows inside the GPU using some code some the **** place, and that it's basically impossible to actually remove that. I'll probably end up getting annoyed enough to search around for text files that contain that stuff, I assume that code is a lot like Microsoft's WPF stuff in Aero. And I've forgotten what they call it, but it's basically CSS with different formatting.
Yeah thats what I thought
And why do you want to get rid of the drop shadow? just curious
Becuase, the way I have my Macbook setup, I have my TV hooked up to it and I play movies on that, and the drop shadow spills over onto my TV and it annoys me, IMO, that is ****** ass coding. :c lol
Oh I see... drop shadow from what exactly? Can you upload an image?
From ANYTHING, like right now I have chrome open, and it's spilling over to my TV, I'll get on that 1 sec.
[gimg]http://i.imgur.com/5nz0v.jpg[/gimg]
K, here's the screenshot, but now I'm starting to think that maybe it's just my TV. :/
[plain][img]http://i.imgur.com/5nz0v.jpg[/img][/plain]
looks like this in code:
The g in front of the IMG is not necessary, if the image is wider than 800 pixel, TIMG is needed thougCode:[plain][img]http://i.imgur.com/5nz0v.jpg[/img][/plain]
Anyway, as I wanted to say, you can circumvent that by resizing the Chrome window (or any other application) on the right side and have a bit of breathing room.
Apparently I have NO idea how to screenshot another display from my Macbook, you'd think Apple'd include the ability intuitively, considering that's their ENTIRE MARKETING CAMPAIGN.
Press CMD+SHIFT+3 to make a screenshot, and Mac OS X (at least Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, as I just tested it with two 1920 x 1200 displays) creates two PNGs saved on your Desktop, one PNG having the content from display 1 and the other PNG having the content from display 2.
Unless you mean something else?
From ANYTHING, like right now I have chrome open, and it's spilling over to my TV, I'll get on that 1 sec.
K, here's the screenshot, but now I'm starting to think that maybe it's just my TV. :/
Apparently I have NO idea how to screenshot another display from my Macbook, you'd think Apple'd include the ability intuitively, considering that's their ENTIRE MARKETING CAMPAIGN.
NO. I KNOW it's not my TV, because I can move the shadow around when I move the window.