CDIconKiller 1.5; disables custom icons on CD-ROMs
Posted: October 24th, 1997, 9:00 am
Download: http://archive.info-mac.org/disk/cd-icon-killer-15.hqx
To suppress custom icons, install this software.
This tends to speed up the Finder by a factor of about a zillion.
To temporarily show the custom icons, hold down the Command key when
opening a folder.
It works "as is" with Apple's CD-ROM drivers (both plain vanilla and
PowerCD), some NEC drives, and Optima Technologies CD-R Access
CD-ROMs; other drives may be added using ResEdit.
CDIconKiller has its own page on the web:
http://www.kagi.com/authors/fab/cdiconk.html
New since 1.4.1:
Works with Mac OS 8.
Updated the docs.
This is freeware, "Share and Enjoy"!
Don't forget to check out my Web pages!
--
Fabrizio Oddone Torino, Italy mailto:[email protected]
http://www.kagi.com/authors/fab/
"I know not why, but all the noblest arts hold in perfection but for a
very little moment. They soon reach a height from which they begin to
decline, and when they have begun to decline it is a pity that they
cannot be knocked on the head; for an art is like a living organism --
better dead than dying." Samuel Butler, "Erewhon"
To suppress custom icons, install this software.
This tends to speed up the Finder by a factor of about a zillion.
To temporarily show the custom icons, hold down the Command key when
opening a folder.
It works "as is" with Apple's CD-ROM drivers (both plain vanilla and
PowerCD), some NEC drives, and Optima Technologies CD-R Access
CD-ROMs; other drives may be added using ResEdit.
CDIconKiller has its own page on the web:
http://www.kagi.com/authors/fab/cdiconk.html
New since 1.4.1:
Works with Mac OS 8.
Updated the docs.
This is freeware, "Share and Enjoy"!
Don't forget to check out my Web pages!
--
Fabrizio Oddone Torino, Italy mailto:[email protected]
http://www.kagi.com/authors/fab/
"I know not why, but all the noblest arts hold in perfection but for a
very little moment. They soon reach a height from which they begin to
decline, and when they have begun to decline it is a pity that they
cannot be knocked on the head; for an art is like a living organism --
better dead than dying." Samuel Butler, "Erewhon"