Mavericks has
certainly optimized OS X; it’s a system designed to please everyone,
and as good an idea as that is, it risks creating aspects that are not
always appreciated, such as the Dashboard and Notification Center. I for
one have never understood the necessity of the Dashboard in a Mac OS X,
In fact, the only reason I ever put anything there was to save it from
looking useless. Unfortunately, ornamental seems to be the primary
purpose behind the Dashboard. It consumes resources, and is not
important enough functionally (at least in my experience). The same can
be said about the notification center. While I can see how it might
serve a purpose for many, but one can also see how it’s not for
everyone. Fortunately, if you share my disapproval of these features,
they can quite easily be disabled through a few terminal commands.
If you do the four-finger squeeze gesture, you can see a list of running full screen apps that shows Dashboard in the list, but since Mavericks, it is movable but not removable.
Similarly, it does look very cool to swipe the trackpad to reveal the notification center, but the novelty wore out for me, to the point where my only interaction with it was to clear all the notifications. The other options are the social buttons, but my social media interactions happen primarily through my smartphone, so the notification center is also a strain on resources that I would rather not put.
If you’ve tried out this method for disabling either of these features, let us know how it went for you, by leaving a comment below.
If you do the four-finger squeeze gesture, you can see a list of running full screen apps that shows Dashboard in the list, but since Mavericks, it is movable but not removable.
Similarly, it does look very cool to swipe the trackpad to reveal the notification center, but the novelty wore out for me, to the point where my only interaction with it was to clear all the notifications. The other options are the social buttons, but my social media interactions happen primarily through my smartphone, so the notification center is also a strain on resources that I would rather not put.
Disabling Dashboard
Open a Terminal Window (Applications > Utilities > Terminal) and enter (or copy and paste) the commands below one by one to disable the Dashboard and restart the dock:defaults write com.apple.dashboard mcx-disabled -boolean YES killall DockThe Finder will automatically restart, and the Dashboard will be disabled.
Enabling Dashboard
If you ever wish to enable Dashboard again, simply open up the Terminal and enter:defaults write com.apple.dashboard mcx-disabled -boolean NO killall DockThis will restart Finder and bring back the Dashboard.
Disabling Notification Center
In order to disable Notification Center, enter these command in a Terminal window:
launchctl unload -w /System/Library/LaunchAgents/com.apple.notificationcenterui.plist
killall NotificationCenterNotification Center should now be inaccessible. In case you received a “process not found” error while running these commands, it does not matter; they should still work.
Enabling Notification Center
If you ever need Notification Center back again, enter this command in a Terminal window:launchctl load -w /System/Library/LaunchAgents/com.apple.notificationcenterui.plistNext, press Command+Shift+G in Finder, which will launch the “Go to Folder” window (like Run in Microsoft Windows). Enter this in that dialog: /System/Library/CoreServices/. Locate “Notification Center” and the Notification Center will be right back where it originally was.
If you’ve tried out this method for disabling either of these features, let us know how it went for you, by leaving a comment below.