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rmondello / gist:1796731
Created February 11, 2012 05:33
Open in Chrome
property theURL : ""
tell application "Safari"
set theURL to URL of current tab of window 1
end tell
tell application "Google Chrome"
open location theURL
activate
end tell
-- click the genius button on the currently playing track
tell application "System Events"
click button 2 of scroll area 1 of window "iTunes" of application process "iTunes"
end tell
@rmondello
rmondello / gist:1983168
Created March 6, 2012 03:10
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@rmondello
rmondello / contributions.sh
Created August 15, 2012 05:53 — forked from tangphillip/contributions.sh
Find your contributions to a git repo, by file
# A regex that matches your commit name. Escape colons, if you use any.
NAME="(Phil(lip)? Tang|[email protected])"
# Find all plaintext files. Warning: Can be slow with moderate or large repos
FILES=(`find . -type f -exec sh -c "file {} | grep text >/dev/null" \; -print`)
# Find files with extension ".coffee" or ".sass"
FILES=(`find . -name "*.coffee" -o -name "*.sass"`)
for FILE in ${FILES[@]}
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
# A quick script to download all your files from CloudApp.
# To run this just run the script passing your e-mail & password
# to the script, for example:
#
# gem install cloudapp_api
# ruby cloudapp-export.rb [email protected] mypassword
#
@rmondello
rmondello / gist:b933231b1fcc83a7db0b
Last active October 6, 2024 20:11
Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

Update (October 2021)

Exporting password + one-time code data from iCloud Keychain is now officially supported in macOS Monterey and Safari 15 (for Monterey, Big Sur, and Catalina). You can access it in the Password Manager’s “gear” icon (System Preferences > Passwords on Monterey, and Safari > Passwords everywhere else), or via the File > Export > Passwords... menu item). You shouldn't need to hack up your own exporter anymore.

Original, Obsolete Content (2014)

After my dad died, I wanted to be able to have access any of his online accounts going forward. My dad was a Safari user and used iCloud Keychain to sync his credentials across his devices. I don’t want to have to keep an OS X user account around just to access his accounts, so I wanted to export his credentials to a portable file.