Apple Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. et al
Filing
589
CLAIM CONSTRUCTION STATEMENT Samsung's Opening Claim Construction Brief (Unredacted Version) filed by Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.. (Attachments: #1 Exhibit Briggs Declaration and Ex. A-F in support of Samsung's Opening Claim Construction Brief, #2 Exhibit Briggs Declaration Ex. G-I, #3 Declaration Wesel Declaration in Support of Samsung's Proposed Claim Construction for US Patent No. 7,200,792, #4 Declaration Cole Declaration in Support of Samsung's Proposed Claim Construction for US Patent No. 7,698,711, #5 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 1, #6 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 2, #7 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 3, #8 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 4, #9 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 5, #10 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 6, #11 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 7A-7G, #12 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 8, #13 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 9A-9C, #14 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 10, #15 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 11, #16 Exhibit Cole Decl. Ex. 12)(Maroulis, Victoria) (Filed on 1/6/2012)
EXHIBIT 8
Universal AppleScript applets « Managing OS X
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Managing OS X
Trials and Tribulations of an OS X Administrator
« More on Portable Home Directories
Radmind 1.6, Tiger and symlinks »
Universal AppleScript applets
I hadn’t seen this documented anywhere else, and just stumbled across it… I wanted to update several
AppleScript applets that were PowerPC applications into Univeral binaries.
Note I’m talking about the sort of AppleScript applications that one builds with Script Editor and saving
the script as an application – not AppleScript Studio apps.
When you save an AppleScript in Script Editor, there are several options in the File Format menu. If you
choose “application”, you’ll get a PowerPC-only app. However, if you choose “application bundle”,
you’ll get a Universal app.
So open your AppleScript apps in Script Editor, and resave them as “application bundles” and you are
set!
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3 Comments on “Universal AppleScript applets”
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11/28/2011
Universal AppleScript applets « Managing OS X
1.
Page 2 of 3
Bahi Says:
March 25, 2006 at 12:24 pm
Top tip! Thanks for this information and for consistently useful, informative and well written
articles.
Reply
2. Starving Fool » Blog Archive » Saving Applescript applet as universal .app Says:
March 17, 2008 at 6:23 pm
[...] emulated by rosetta. Surfing through ADC articles didn’t show any hint, until I googled this
one. Many thanks to the author [...]
Reply
3.
Corbin052198 Says:
April 4, 2010 at 12:09 pm
Thanks! I made an icon set that are applescripts with icons. When you click one them, they
display the message “This is an icon, not an application”, then close.
I saved as just an application, then later found out it was a PowerPC script. I knew Rosseta was
optional in the Mac OS X 10.6 install, so I wanted to get it universal. Thanks for the tip!!
Reply
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Save Non-Popup Windows: An AppleScript applet
Page 1 of 1
FM Home | Contact Us | Links | Software License Agreement
Save Non-Popup Windows
an AppleScript applet by Antone Roundy
from Mouken, L.C.
Click to download | Click to return to FileMaker Pro Tools page
What it Does:
Save Non-Popup Windows saves the size and position of all open Finder windows,
not including popup windows, and restores that same window setup later by closing
all open windows, opening the windows that were open when you saved your setup,
and resizing and positioning all windows as they were.
Use it to save all the different window setups you commonly use. I have a popup
window at the bottom of my screen with six copies of this applet for different
window configurations I use commonly.
How to Use It:
To save your window setup:
1. Doubleclick, or otherwise launch Save Non-Popup Windows.
2. Click "Save".
3. Optionally change the name of the applet to something describing the window
setup you saved.
To restore your window setup:
1. Doubleclick, or otherwise launch Save Non-Popup Windows.
2. Click "Restore".
To reconfigure Save Non-Popup Windows so that you don't have to click "restore"
every time:
1. Drag and drop any file or folder on Save Non-Popup Windows.
2. Click "Fix".
To make Save Non-Popup Windows put up the "save/restore" dialog again so that
you can change the saved window settings:
1. Drag and drop any file or folder on Save Non-Popup Windows.
2. Click "Unfix".
License:
Save Non-Popup Windows is freeware. You may do whatever you want with it...as
long as it's legal! I'd appreciate it if you would leave my name and URL in the
Description area. I'd also appreciate it if you would let me know if you redistribute
it.
Save Non-Popup Windows is provided as-is with no warrantee whatsoever. By using
it, you agree to indemnify me against all liability for any loss of data, damages, etc.
or any consequential effect. If you do not accept these terms, then you are not
licensed to use it.
© 2001 Mouken, L.C.
http://fm.geckotribe.com/applescript/savenonpopup.php3
11/28/2011
I-Spy 1.0b2; an AppleScript applet that monitors FTP sites | Applefritter
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Submitted by Ex-parrot on February 10, 2006 - 11:00pm Mac OS Classic
Telecommunications Macintosh Unsorted Unsorted Info-Mac
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Internet &
Hi,
User login
Username: *
Internet Spy 1.0b2 is a collection of AppleScript and Perl scripts that together
monitor remote FTP sites for changes. I intend this beta release to ferret out bugs
and problems as well as to solicit your feedback.
Password: *
This distribution includes extensive documentation and examples. The documentation
itself is a set of HTML pages, and you will need a web browser (like Netscape or
Mosaic) or an HTML viewer to properly display them.
Log in
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MacScripter / Can I include a scripting addition in my application?
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Index » Scripting Additions » Can I include a scripting
addition in my application?
2005-10-11 03:09:08 pm
julifos
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From: Malasaña, Madrid
Registered: 2002-11-20
Posts: 2014
#1
Since the release of Panther and AppleScript 1.9.2, Apple's Script Editor can save a script
application (applet or droplet) in a special new bundle format. You must create a folder called
"Scripting Additions" within your application's "Contents/Resources/" folder, then copy the
osaxen there. This also applies to AppleScript Studio applications.
A little example bundling XML Tools within your app:
yourScript.app/Contents/Resources/Scripting Additions/XML Tools.osax
The main goal of embedding scripting additions within your project is that the end-user doesn't
have to install such osax in his system to make it work.
However, note that embeding a scripting addition in your application doesn't make it available
to all the system. If you bundle XML Tools within your applet and you open it within the Script
Editor, XML Tools must be present in your system before you can use its terminology. It won't
be loaded from the applet. When the applet is run, it loads the osax on-the-fly, and it is
available only to such applet.
Before distributing a scripting addition with your script, read carefully its license to make sure
you are not distributing shareware, or perhaps you need include its documentation in the same
distribution, or...
In OS X versions previous to Panther you could not embed scripting additions with your project.
However, under OS 9 and back there was some tools able to do it, such as Applet Binder or
FaceSpan.
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Mac Tips and Tricks - Articles
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Home • Tips • Articles
AppleScript Basics
by Maria Langer
Note: this article is taken from MAC OS X 10.3 PANTHER ED: VISL
QUICKSTRT GD, © 2004 Maria Langer Reproduced by permission of Pearson
Education, Inc. Publishing as Peachpit Press. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. To
buy this book, visit www.peachpit.com
AppleScript is the scripting language that comes with Mac OS. It enables you to
automate tasks and extend the functionality of Mac OS X.
You use AppleScript's Script Editor application to write small programs or
scripts that include specially worded statements. AppleScript statements are
converted by Mac OS into Apple events--messages that can be understood by the
operating system and applications. When you run a script, the script can send
instructions to the operating system or applications and receive messages in
return.
For example, say that at the end of each working day, you back up the contents
of a specific folder to a network disk before you shut down your computer. The
folder is large and the network is slow, so you often have to wait ten minutes or
more to shut down the computer when the backup is finished. You can write a
script that mounts the network drive, backs up the folder, and shuts down your
computer automatically. You simply run the script, turn out the lights, and go
home. AppleScript does the rest.
In this part of the chapter, I introduce AppleScript's components to give you an
idea of how it works and what you can do with it.
Tip
You can find a lot more information about AppleScript, including tutorials,
sample scripts, and a reference manual, at Apple's AppleScript Web site,
www.apple.com/applescript/.
AppleScript Files
There are three main types of AppleScript files:
Official
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Today's Tip
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Devices
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Apps with iCal
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Visualizer Configurations
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Mac Tips and Tricks - Articles
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Scripts (formerly compiled scripts) are completed scripts that can be
launched from an application's script menu or the Script Menu. Doubleclicking a compiled script icon launches Script Editor.
More...
Applications (or applets) are full-fledged applications that can be
launched by double-clicking their icons.
Picturing Your Photos on
the iPod
Text files are plain text files containing AppleScript statements. They can
be opened with Script Editor or any text editor and can be run from within
Script Editor. Double-clicking a script text file icon launches the
application in which it was written.
More Articles
Script Editor
Script Editor, which has been completely rewritten for Mac OS X 10.3, is an
application you can use to write AppleScript scripts. It has a number of features
that make it an extremely useful tool for script writing:
Featured Article
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The "Where'd It Go?"
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AppleScript Basics
The Script Editor window can automatically format script statements so
they're easy to read.
The syntax checker can examine your script statements and identify any
syntax errors that would prevent the script from running or compiling.
The Open Dictionary command makes it possible to view an application's
dictionary of AppleScript commands and classes.
The record script feature can record actions as script steps.
The Save and Save As commands enable you to save scripts in a variety of
formats.
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