Thanks Jonathan.
That worked perfectly.
Sadam Ahmed
On 7/9/2018 9:20 AM, Jonathan Cohn wrote:
How to enable power chime:
Step 1: Disconnect your Mac from power.
Step 2: Launch Terminal using Spotlight, or open the
application manually (it’s inside your Mac’s Applications folder).
Step 3: Paste the following line into Terminal and hit Enter:
|defaults write com.apple.PowerChime ChimeOnAllHardware -bool
true; open /System/Library/CoreServices/PowerChime.app &|
Step 4: Re-connect your Mac to the MagSafe power source. If the
battery needs charging and there’s power, the familiar chime you’re
used to hearing on your iOS devices should trigger.
How to disable power chime:
Just paste the following line into the Terminal window:
|defaults write com.apple.PowerChime ChimeOnAllHardware -bool
false;killall PowerChime|
Hit Enter and you’re good.
The command kills the running process which takes care of playing the
chime while disabling the feature through the defaults command string.
How to play power chime manually:
Paste this into the Terminal window and hit Enter:
|afplay
/System/Library/CoreServices/PowerChime.app/Contents/Resources/connect_power.aif|
You should head the chime immediately after hitting Enter.
For those interested in technicalities, the Terminal command described
in this article tells OS X to always play the power chime, regardless
of the model of your Mac. It also launches the tiny PowerChime
application which must be running in the background in order for the
power chime to trigger upon connecting the device to power.
But even this little feature couldn’t have gone without the attention
to detail Apple’s always been associated with.
As OS X Daily explains, if you keep an eye on the battery icon in your
Mac’s menu bar, you’ll realize OS X triggers the power chime at the
exact same time as the charging bolt appears on the battery icon.
mac-charging-indicator-menu-bar
“Note the battery charging indicator will only display onscreen if
there is less than 100 percent power available with the Mac battery
and the Mac is either in sleep mode or the screen is locked,” OS X
Daily said.
Again, the new MacBook ships with the power chime enabled out of the
box, providing an auditory confirmation that the charging cable is
attached to its USB-C port and the computer is charging.
From an IDB article.
On Jul 8, 2018, at 6:22 PM, Sadam Ahmed <li...@sadamahmed.com
<mailto:li...@sadamahmed.com>> wrote:
Hi all,
A while ago someone posted a string which could be typed via terminal
so that the Mac would make the same chime noise that an iOS device
makes when connected to power.
Can anyone assist with this?
Many thanks for assistance rendered.
Sincerely,
sadam Ahmed
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Yours sincerely,
Sadam Ahmed
JAWS certified, 2018
FaceTime, iMessage & email
sa...@sadamahmed.com
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