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Didn't get it.
Those "icons" on Mac are actually directories -- UNLIKE on Windows, GNOME or KDE. You can see it, if you execute a "ll /Applications" and see that every "icon" has an ".app" suffix which classifies an app directory with an app-specific directory structure.
...of course you can move those "icons" to the trash bin as well.
Edited 2011-01-11 14:56 UTC
I'm not sure if you're trolling or not...
Anyway, Here's how I "got rid of*" the App Store after browsing it a few times.
1. Click-hold on the App Store icon that was deposited on my dock.
2. Drag it up until it turned into a little "paper ball"/"poof"
3. Let go.
* Obviously I didn't really remove it from my system, but if I did want to, I could drag it from the applications folder to the trash, and not need a keyboard shortcut. Though Thom's way is more thorough, I find it's easier to just get it out of my way.
Yes, explicitly dragging an application from the application directory into the bin is the way to go. And should IMHO be the only way to do it.
I have a friend using OS X since 10.3 and he often has the problem of suddenly vanishing applications. But the way he is using his computer is quite "unique". He clicks on everything that moves or opens. This sometimes yields into unwanted results.
Maybe, he better should get a system from Sirius Cybernetics Corporation ;-)
Because, for him, I am a computer expert per se, he thinks it is my duty to reinstall these applications. At the moment this is my only relation to OS X.
pica




Member since:
2005-07-10
<kidding>The Linux kernel like the XNU kernel does not even know about icons. Thus you have no need to remove them.</kidding>
Using the Gnome Desktop you simply move icons into the paper basket to remove them. No cyptic key combination is needed to perform this task.
pica