trick

Rising Card Magic App for iPhone

A while back, I wrote a story on various magic tricks you can do with your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Shortly after I posted it, someone let me know that I had missed on. Namely, Rising Card by theory11.com.

Today, I set about rectifying the error of omission by recording this mini video with the help of @davesalter84 (on camera) and Loran from MacStation in Abbotsford, BC.

Rising Card is a simple trick to do and is very convincing. You have your participant name any card, it doesn’t matter which. Then bring out your iPhone and hand it to the participant to launch the app themselves. You don’t even have to be in the room as the participant shakes the iPhone and witnesses their chosen card rising magically from the deck on the iPhone screen.

Rising Card sells for $2.99 US and is brought to you by a professional magic effect supplier—theory11.com.

No Flash? No problem—click here!»

April Fool’s Pranks

By: Jon Gales

This is a special “holiday” version of PowerUser Monday. Supercharged with

lots of fun OS X pranks to pull on your family/friends/co-workers. You’ve probably

seen a few of these before, but some of these just got the go ahead from the

DOD (Department of Defense).

What’s That Number?

Go to the International pref pane and click the Numbers tab. For the

example

below I changed Symbol to 9, Decimal to 4 and Thousands to 6.

This

is

a

great

trick because if your victim uses the default calculator, all of the answers

will be off.

That’s Not What I Pressed!!!

Go to the International pref pane and click the Input tab. Check “Dvorak”

and then uncheck whatever was selected before. This will make the keyboard seemingly

go crazy. For example, MacMerc.com when written in the dvorak layout is: MajM.pjvjrm

Stop That Flashing

Go to the Universal Access tab and click the hearing tab. Check the

box next to “Flash the screen whenever an alert sound occurs”. This gets amazingly

annoying and almost no one knows where this jewel is stashed.

I Know What I Pressed Dammit

Go to the Universal Access tab and click Keyboard. Hit the radio button

for Sticky keys. Now try hitting command, control, option or shift. Muahaha.

Nooo… I Need My Friggin Keypad!

Go to the Universal Access tab and click Mouse. Hit the radio button

for Mouse Keys on. Try using that keypad now… If your company has an accountant

that uses a Mac, this is your chance to get back.

My Dock! My beautiful Dock!

Find a folder with 30-75 items and hit command-a to select all the items.

Now drag em to the Dock. The only way to get them out is one at a time… Don’t

try this unless you have a lot of free time (use it on your friend untested if

you have to)

That’s Not Photoshop!

This takes a lot of time, but it’s a quality trick. Think of an application

that your victim uses a LOT and one they don’t use very much (probably a Utility).

A

good

place

to

start

is

what

is

in

the

Dock.

  1. Take a screen shot (command-shift-3) so you’ll be able to make sure the

    end product looks right.

  2. Command-click the icon of an app in

    the

    Dock

    to

    find

    it

    in

    the

    Finder and choose your second app.

  3. Using get info (command-I)

    you can switch the icons all around. Just use the mouse and click

    on the icon in the info panel and use copy/paste. To do it without losing

    an icon, make a folder to store the icon temporarily. For instance, get info

    on Mail.app, copy the icon, go to the folder’s info and paste the icon, copy

    Word’s icon

    and paste it on Mail.app, grab the Mail.app icon from the folder and paste

    it to Word. Yes, this is pretty confusing but that’s what makes it fun.

  4. Once the icons are changed,

    switch

    the

    names

  5. Once the names are done arrange the icons correctly in the Dock

    (using the screen shot).

  6. Now trash the evidence.

If you can’t figure this out, don’t sweat it. If you can, I pity your friends.

User Submitted Tricks

Thanks to Simon Wheatley for these two tricks!

Create screenshot of a clean screen, no active apps or windows open.

- make that

screenshot your backdrop

– hide the dock to the left or right

– remove icons from the desktop (finder prefs)

– annoying but fun

2. Create a custom startup item in /library/startupitems/ that restarts

the computer each time it is booted. I took the time to create the

script and have posted it here.

I suggest that you make it a log-in item by going to System Preferences

> Login Items… If you make it a startup item most likely you’ll be

screwed over trying

to get rid of it. It is possible to force quit a log-in item (I have

tested this script). Enjoy! – Jon

Thanks to John Dough for this one (I swear that’s a real name icon razz April Fools Pranks )

  1. Take a screenshot of any state of the desktop [command-shift-3] Make

    sure Finder is active. Ed-Note: Probably be best to take a screen shot

    of what’s on the screen when you arrive to the desk.

  2. Open screen shot in photoshop.
  3. Select the path select tool (black arrow)
  4. Hit the F key until image is full

    screen.

  5. This will give the impression that the computer is frozen as clicking on

    any part of the image will do nothing.

Thanks to Slava for this one:

“Okay, here is a semi-mean way to torture your friends:

http://www.unsanity.org/slava/AppleBurnAlertNotifier-apr1.sit

Put it into Login Items for your friend or something. And we are not really that mean. We are just having fun. Our apologies if that actually scares anybody, even if it is April 1″

It’s genius… Just try it!

Thanks to Rick for this one:

I remapped my coworkers ExposÈ Desktop shortcut key to the Left Shift

button…only works for touch typists…hunt and peckers will be

looking at their keyboards when the windows are going crazy.

If you’ve got a killer trick please let me

know ASAP (before the 1st). And yes, I know about the

“Zoom” and “Black on White” features. They are just too well known to include.

The Quick Fix

Brought to you by: James

Do you use OSX? Do you have suspicious disk activity? Are you worried after a forced reboot? Do you just want to check things? Are you tired of having to re-boot from your install disk to run Disk Utility on your startup drive? Then I have something for you. Most OSX users don’t know about the power of their Unix core, but this is one trick that you won’t forget.

How do you run Disk Utility (or something similar) without restarting from your install disk? Just restart holding command-s (remember “save me”, for you word processor users), and you’ll be introduced to a new screen. The screen will be black, featuring white text (and 5 color letters in the word ‘COLOR’ in 10.0-10.2 only). Once the verbose (words) load has finished, you’ll recognize what appears to be the terminal. Enter /sbin/fsck -y (or /sbin/fsck -fy if you have File System Journaling enabled) and hit enter. You’ll want to continue this string until it finds no more problems (fixing a problem, may make another problem more…visible). When you’re done, enter reboot and hit enter.

Congratulations, you have successfully repaired your disk just as if you restarted from your install CD, but without the hassle. Please note that larger, more powerful disk utilities may be needed for more serious problems.

Note: If you are using Open Firmware (ROM) password protection, you’ll need to disable it to start with the ‘command-s’ key set.

Don’t forget to buy a shirt.