We had a great Thanksgiving.
Month: November 2009
Xcode: notes
To reset Xcode to the default settings:
$ defaults delete com.apple.Xcode $ rm -rf ~/Library/Application Support/Xcode
First, I dislike having a lot of popup windows so I set the layout to “All-In-One” to keep most things within a single window:
And my usual indentation style:
I like having the files autosaved on build:
Seeing /opt in Mac OS X Finder
DVD Ripping
I’ve been watching more movies on my laptop while commuting to work on the train. I’d mostly been happy either buying them from iTunes or just playing the DVD. However, lately I’ve wanted to have a couple available and decided to try some of the dvd rippers.
I’d used “Mac the Ripper” but it’s getting rather dated and since I upgraded to Snow Leopard I’ve been avoiding installing Rosetta to run old PowerPC binaries. So it was out.
I tried Aieesoft’s “DVD Ripper” but the demo wasn’t that impressive and I didn’t like the way the movies were organized. Why no titles?
I ended up trying Ripit and it does just what I want: insert a DVD and it copies it and names it appropriately.

It worked pretty well.
Price is $19.95 and you get 10 free conversions to try it out. It’s based on the open source Handbrake decoders.
Google dominating search
There’s talk that Bing has gotten to a 10% market share in search. Apple Insider instead points out that the study didn’t include a big part of Google’s search business (you know, maps, video, local directory). Here’s a chart showing how Google is dominating and pushing nearly 90%:
Way Cool Html
What an incredible use of scrollbars. Here’s a digital clock:
Unemployment rate
Pick your favorite, worst recession and compare with how we are doing now. There are even predictions that unemployment may reach 12%.
Unemployment is always a relative thing but this chart looks at employment as a percentage of the total work force. From Brad DeLong:
Gold bugs unite!
Paris
Delay
Sorry for the long delay. I’ve been playing around a bit.








