MenuBar Apps – dotMac Menu

This is my second entry into my series of favorite MenuBar applications. You can read my prior entries here: JumpCut.
The MenuBar application that Apple provides in the .Mac preference pane just isn’t up to the task in my opinion. It tells you your last sync and provides you a click to the preference pane but that is it.

dotMac MenuBar.png

Where are the clicks to all those rich features Apple keeps emailing me about? What if I want easy access to my webmail or iDisk? It just simply isn’t there. The wizards over at infinite nexus must have felt my pain when they developed dotMac Menu. This is an excellent donationware little application that gives you access to the entirety of your dotMac goodness.

dotMac Menu.png

Using this little application, I can immediately get access to all of the dotMac features (including a few I don’t even use). It even tells me when Apple will come knocking on my door asking me to pony up for another year. You can customize the level of detail and even if you want it to use the graphite or aqua look. You can download it right here.

Technorati Tags:
, , ,

Continue reading

Aperture Wonkiness

Aperture-256x256.png

I’ve excepted my Aperture library from TimeMachine and over the weekend I was making sure to back up my Aperture library to a few places. In the process I managed to duplicate my image folder by a factor of four. Yep. It went from 8,000 images to 32,000 images. When I looked in the folder I saw things like this.
Dave running with scissors
Dave running with scissors (1)
Dave running with scissors (2)
Dave running with scissors (3)
I’m pretty certain this was my own doing and not Apertures but it left me with a trick problem of how to get rid of all those extra copies. I certainly wasn’t going to do it by hand for 8,000 photos. I started thinking about some fancy Automator or Applescript action but then I remembered that Aperture has an “Move Master” command. I ran it putting the masters in a new location. That essentially rebuilt the 8,000 photo folder making it possible for me to simply delete the bloated folder.

Continue reading

A Better Leopard Mail Search

mda7.jpg

MacOSXHints recently figured out that Leopard Mail has some helpful searching tools. Put simply, some of the improved spotlight functionality has found its way into the mail search code.
The three tags that are known at this time are from, subject, and email.

“from:david sparks”

This command would get you copies of all emails from me.

“subject:macsparky”

This would return all the emails with MacSparky in the subject line.

“email:david@macsparky.com”

This returns all the email from a specific email address (as opposed to the identifying name tag).
The full article is at OSX hints right here. It is strange they don’t include the boolean operators (which you can use to search email through Spotlight). It is also strange, but not unusual, for Apple to include this kind of code and tell nobody about it. Doesn’t it make you wonder that some software engineer might have just put it in for his/her own interest and not bothered to tell anyone about it?

Continue reading

Screencast Update – Preview in the Works

preview-icon.png

I’ve got a really nice screencast in the works addressing many of the new features in Preview. The Leopard version of Preview has some very nice editing features for both PDFs and images. This next screencast will be my longest yet and, assuming work doesn’t get crazy, should publish in about a week. I’m also trying to get the feed permanently moved over to the new server. I know that should be easy but it seems to be vexing me.

Continue reading

Review – Scrivener

Scriviner png.png

This is a review that has been a long time coming.  I think the most important thing a word processor can do is get out of your way.  What I mean is that Hemingway wrote his genius on a napkin while I sometimes write complete drivel on my expensive MacBook Pro.  No matter what software you use to write, at the end of the day it is your words and not some arbitrary feature set that determines the quality of the final product.
 
This is why I like Scrivener from LiteratureandLatte software.  It is a word processor that attempts to help you with the words.  Scrivener is not just a word processor.  This application is as much about planning and organizing your writing project as it is about getting the physical words on the screen.
 
The first thing you need to do with most writing projects is a bit of research.  Using Scrivener I can capture all of my research in the same project that I am writing my masterpiece in.  When writing legal briefs I have reference cases and statutes, exhibits, and a variety of other source materials.  When writing for the Mac community I also have research materials that include screencasts, images, and web pages.  It doesn’t matter.  Scrivener takes just about anything I throw at it and organizes it in a research tab.  Scrivener doesn’t make you monkey with getting your research and your document on the page at the same time either.  It easily displays your research while giving you a separate typing pane with no troubles.
Following this paradigm, Scrivener also has a virtual corkboard.  Maybe I’m dating myself but I remember writing papers in school with index cards.  You would summarize important points and ideas and then spread them out on a desk and start playing with their organization.  Well the Scrivener developer must have had the same experience because Scrivener comes with a virtual corkboard and an endless supply of virtual notecards.   All of your research and related documents are given their own index card which you can then shuffle and sort on the virtual corkboard.  For those of you who remember doing this, it will feel like sliding back into a pair of comfortable shoes.  For those among you that have never tried using notecards, I highly recommend it.  Scrivener keeps an eye on how you move the cards around and sorts the underlying documents to conform.  It also allows you to tie keywords to your notecards to make organization and retrieval easier on large projects.

Corkboard.jpg

If you need to reduce your notecards to an outline, Scrivener has that handled as well.  This outline is much more robust that found in other word possessors but not quite up to snuff in comparison to OmniOutliner.  However, with the added bonus of being attached to your research and drafts, I don’t find myself missing OmniOutliner and for someone who likes OmniOutliner as much as I do, that is saying something.
Scrivener also realizes that sometimes our editing can go a bit astray.  The application has a “snapshot” feature that allows you to capture versions of a document during the editing process.  You can then go back and retrieve that discarded treasure later when you come to your senses.  It is a bit like Time Machine for documents.
In addition to getting you ready to write, Scrivener makes the process of writing as simple and distraction free as possible.  It has a very clean full screen mode that clears all the usual diversions off your screen and provides you easy access to your research.  If you are a nostalgic old guy like me, you can even configure it to be green words on a black screen.  I used to write for a newspaper on one of those old machines and every time I see this view in Scrivener, it brings back fond memories.

FullScreenEvolved.jpg

One of the things I like about Scrivener is how it changes all the rules.  Page formatting is not there.  Instead you have these various chunks of text displayed in a visual way that is very conducive to making the actual words better and less prone to the white noise a lot of word processors can throw your way.  This doesn’t mean you can’t do your standard formatting in Scrivener.  It just doesn’t become your focus.
If you are writing a screenplay, Scrivener also has built in tools for you that covers the basics of Script editing and exports to other scriptwriting software.  I played with these tools a bit but have no experience scriptwriting and really have no ability to give an informed opinion on this issue.
Once you’ve got your document written, Scrivener can print it for you or export it in one of several formats including Microsoft Word, text, HTML, and others.  It even supports multimarkdown markup language which I’m told is important for typesetters but again this is a feature I don’t have any experience with.
In summary, I really like what Scrivener does for my writing.  It actually makes the words and documents better.  Scrivener is substance over form.  If you find yourself managing large writing projects, you really owe it to yourself to give it a try.  Scrivener will cost you $39.95.  The developer has a free 30 day trial.  There is also an excellent screencast on the website to show you how Scrivener works.

Technorati Tags:
,

Continue reading

The LaunchBar Experiment

Picture 1.png

Since posting on the issues with Quicksilver, I’ve received two distinct groups of emails. Faction A is with me that “the Man” will indeed need to rip Quicksilver from our cold dead hands and faction B is telling me that I’m being silly for not even giving LaunchBar a chance. So I decided to do an experiment and run LaunchBar for a couple weeks. I’ve just installed it today and spent most of the day in meetings and away from my Mac. So far I seem to have its application launching, address book, and iTunes features down but that is about it.
I have no idea how to really use it to move files as I do in Quicksilver. Likewise I have no idea if LaunchBar can append text files, run timers, email files from my desktop or a variety of other tasks I use Quicksilver for. Nevertheless, I’m going to try and run it for a few weeks and see what happens. I’ll report back and maybe even do a review at some point in the not so distant future. Stay tuned.

Continue reading

One for the Kids – Elf Yourself

Elf Yourself.png

Someone told me about this really goofy website called ElfYourself.com. It has four little elf bodies and you upload the faces of you and three pals and then you end up doing a very funny little elf dance. My kids love it and I must admit … so do I.
How to geek up your Elf.
Use a screencasting capture program (I used iShowU) to capture the whole thing into a Quicktime movie. You can then drop it in iMove or FinalCut for some quick titles and you are off to the races. I did this and now our family elf dancing routine is going on the annual Christmas DVD.

Continue reading

Quicksilver Doomed!?

quicksilvericon.png

Today lifehacker ran an exclusive interview with Quicksilver developer Nicholas Jitkoff in which Jitkoff essentially says he is moving on and leaving Quicksilver to linger.
Jitkoff: I’m inclined to encourage users to move over to the more stable and well supported alternatives like LaunchBar. Right now QS 54 (ed: the current build) accomplishes everything that I really need, the problem is stability, which for some reason most people seem to be ignoring.
Lifehacker: Right, in the end stability is what matters most. I have a MacBook Pro that—until your recent updates—crashed QS on a very regular basis, which was always heartbreaking. But I’ve seen major stability improvements since the updates, which has been fantastic.
Jitkoff: Basically, that branch is condemned to a long slow death. I just don’t know if the experimental one will ever be up to snuff. Hence the recommendation of third party apps.

Blink.
Quicksilver’s developer just told me to download Launchbar. The apocalypse has arrived.
I’ve noticed stability problems with Quicksilver since Leopard arrived. Primarily, it has shut down on me a few times requiring me to restart it. I’ve also helped a few friends troubleshoot some general Quicksilver wonkiness. While my initial reaction is that you’ll have to pry Quicksilver out of my cold dead hand, you never know. Jitkoff also implied that he has something else up his sleeve and, since QuickSilver is now open source, some enterprising programmer may just take it to the next level. Time will tell. For the meantime anyway, I’m sticking with it. There is just way too much functionality to give this application up.
You can read the entire interview right here.

Continue reading

Dan Carlin’s Hardcore History

Picture 1.png

I recently discovered a great podcast by Dan Carlin called “Hardcore History” Dan does a great job of drawing lines and connections that never occurred to me. For instance, in one show he talks about the similarities between Alexander the Great and Hitler. Dan doesn’t limit himself to any particular period and is full of insight. If you are a history junkie, this one is worth checking out.

Continue reading