- Звуки операционной системы «Mac OS» скачать и слушать онлайн
- Question: Q: How do I turn off startup sound?
- Helpful answers
- How to Add Startup Sounds to Your Mac
- Use Automator to create custom spoken text or use a sound file
- What to Know
- Creating Startup Sounds for Your Mac
- Use Automator to Create an Application Wrapper
- Speaking Text With the Mac’s Built-In Voices
- How to Play Back an Audio File
- How to Add the Application as a Startup Item
Звуки операционной системы «Mac OS» скачать и слушать онлайн
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Question: Q: How do I turn off startup sound?
Every computer I ever had, the first thing I do is to turn off the startup sound because it is very annoying in a public place and sometimes in a quiet place. I have not been able to find out how to trun it off on my Air. I asked the guys at the stores and they just say you can’t. That is really dumb. I turned off my speaker but that is not a practical way because I may not remember to turn it off when I shut down.
The question is how do I turn it off permenantly.
MacBook Air, Mac OS X (10.7.4)
Posted on Jun 4, 2012 12:50 AM
Helpful answers
I’m sorry but Hippomormor’s suggestion did not work for me. this, however, did.
1. Launch Terminal (from Applications > Utilities > Terminal);
2. Wait for the Terminal UI to display your computer’s name (root directory) and punch in:
3. Hit Return/Enter;
4. Now you’ll be prompted to type in your administrator password. Do that, hit OK, and you’re done.
When you restart your Mac, the OS X boot chime should no longer play. If you somehow decide you want the boot sound back, simply fire up Terminal again and, instead of the aforementioned command, use sudo nvram -d SystemAudioVolume .
And yes, I’m on Mavericks. Hope this helps, cheers.
Jan 27, 2014 3:47 PM
I just hit the mute button before I reset and get no chime on start up. Hope that works for you!
Sep 17, 2013 6:37 AM
Why use third party stuff for something you can do yourself in terminal?
1. Login as administrator and open a terminal window
2. Create scriptfile for muting
sudo nano /path/to/mute-on.sh
3. Enter this as content, when done press control+O to save and control+X to exit:
#!/bin/bash
osascript -e ‘set volume with output muted’
4. Create scriptfile for unmuting
sudo nano /path/to/mute-off.sh
5. Enter this as content, when done press control+O to save and control+X to exit:
#!/bin/bash
osascript -e ‘set volume without output muted’
6. Make both files executable:
sudo chmod u+x /path/to/mute-on.sh
sudo chmod u+x /path/to/mute-off.sh
7. Check if any hooks already exist (these will be overwritten, so make sure it is OK for you)
sudo defaults read com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook
sudo defaults read com.apple.loginwindow LogoutHook
8. Add hooks for muting
sudo defaults write com.apple.loginwindow LogoutHook /path/to/mute-on.sh
sudo defaults write com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook /path/to/mute-off.sh
Notes:
— /path/to/ is the location of the scripts, I used /Library/Scripts/
— you can skip the unmuting loginhook (i.e. each logout will silence your machine), but I like it this way because I always have sound available exactly at the volume level I set last time
— root has to be the owner of the script files – running an editor from command line with sudo is the easiest way to achieve that (otherwise you need to chown)
— to delete the hooks, use the following:
sudo defaults delete com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook
sudo defaults delete com.apple.loginwindow LogoutHook
hold down the mute key when turning it on 😉
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How to Add Startup Sounds to Your Mac
Use Automator to create custom spoken text or use a sound file
What to Know
- Create an application wrapper around a Terminal command to say a phrase or play a sound file.
- Add it as a startup item.
- With this method, you can add music, speech, or a sound effect as your startup sound.
You can personalize your Mac by changing the sound that plays when you start it up. Here’s how to do so a Mac running OS X 10.4 (Tiger) or later.
Creating Startup Sounds for Your Mac
The shell script we use depends on whether we want the Mac to speak specific text using one of the available built-in voices, or play back an audio file that contains music, speech, or sound effects. We’ll show you how to use both methods. The first step is to create an application wrapper from within Automator.
Use Automator to Create an Application Wrapper
Whether you want to use custom text with a built-in voice or play back an audio file, you’ll first need to create an application wrapper using Automator.
Go to Applications and launch Automator. Or, type Automator into Spotlight Search.
Select Application as the template type to use, and then select Choose.
Near the top-left corner of the window, make sure Actions is highlighted.
From the Actions library, select Utilities.
Select and drag Run Shell Script to the workflow pane.
Speaking Text With the Mac’s Built-In Voices
We’ll use the say command to create our custom spoken text application. In this example, we’ll instruct the Mac to say, «Hi, welcome back, I’ve missed you» at startup using the built-in Fred voice.
Copy the command below and enter it into the Run Shell Script box:
We put the text in double-quotes because it contains punctuation marks, and anything in double-quotes is treated as text and not another command. Even if your text doesn’t contain any punctuation, it’s a good idea to surround it with double-quotes.
Select Run from the top right of the screen to test the application.
You’ll hear your message spoken in the Fred voice, and you’ll see green checkmarks in the log below indicating that the script and workflow are completed.
When you’ve verified that your script is working properly, go to the File menu and select Save.
Name the file and save it to your Mac. Make a note of where you saved the file.
How to Play Back an Audio File
If you’d rather use an audio file that contains music, speech, or sound effects for your startup sound, you’ll use the afplay command. The afplay command instructs Terminal to play back the sound file after the command.
The afplay command can play back most sound file formats, such as MP3, WAV, AIFF, or AAC files, but it won’t play back protected iTunes files.
Find the sound effect file you want to use and note its pathname.
Use this command in the Run Shell Script box, changing «path to sound record» to the correct sound location on your computer:
In this example, we’re using a free ZapSplat ocean sound effect recently downloaded:
If you’re having trouble figuring out your sound effect’s exact pathname, open a Terminal window and drag the sound file into it. The pathname will display, and you can then copy and past it into your script.
Select Run from the top right of the screen to test the application.
You’ll hear your sound effect, and you’ll see green checkmarks in the log below indicating that the script and workflow are completed.
When you’ve verified that your script is working properly, go to the File menu and select Save.
Name the file and save it to your Mac. Make a note of where you saved the file.
How to Add the Application as a Startup Item
Now that you’ve created an application with spoken custom text or an audio file, it’s time to add it as a startup item.
From the Apple menu, select System Preferences. (Or type System Preferences into Spotlight Search).
Select the User & Groups icon (or Accounts in older versions of OS X).
Select your username and then select the Login Items tab.
Select the plus sign (+) below the Login Items window to open a standard Finder browsing screen.
Go to your newly created sound application and select it.
Select the Add button.
Your sound file is now part of the Login Items list. The next time you start your Mac, you’ll hear your new startup sound.
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