Sites of the week

TopDesk by Otaku Software Caffeine by Lighthead Personal Software Inspector by Secunia Coda by Panic Software

MacFUSE, NTFS-3g & More

Posted by oc | Free, Macintosh, Utilities | Tuesday 4 May 2010 22:46

When Windows XP came out, Microsoft started transitioning consumers away from the their old file system, FAT32, and onto the sleeker, better NTFS. Macs, however, can’t write to NTFS, even with the latest OS, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (actually Snow Leopard support writing NTFS, but it’s a complicated solution). Luckily for us, there’s free software available that bridges that gap: MacFUSE.

MacFUSE allows you to support 3rd-party file system drivers on your Mac, including NTFS. A company called Tuxera has an open-source driver for NTFS (they also sell a high-performance version) which allows your Mac to read and write windows latest file systems.

With most external hard drive now formatted with NTFS, not being able to write to these drives can be a serious stumbling block on the path to interoperability.

VLC

Posted by oc | Cross-Platform, Free, Macintosh, Uncategorized, Windows | Wednesday 21 October 2009 10:06

If there’s a video format out there, odds are VLC can play it. From DVD to MKV, VLC can just play it.

VLC also offers features such as transcoding and streaming support for the advanced user. I recently set up VLC as the default player on a computer for my friend’s five-year-old daughter. She can double-click a movie and VLC is set to open full-screen and start playing. No hassle.

If you don’t have VLC, just get it. It’s free, it runs on Macs, Windows, and Linux. It plays almost everything, and it just works. It has plenty of advanced settings if you want them, but mostly, double-click and start watching.

Paparazzi!

Posted by oc | Free, Macintosh, Utilities | Wednesday 29 July 2009 12:14

Paparazzi! isn’t new, but it works, and works well. It takes pictures of websites using the WebKit (Safari) engine on your Macintosh. Last updated in 2006, but still just as useful, Paparazzi! lets you set a number of options including a delay, which can be useful for timing moving images or page dynamic effects. It’s not for everyone, but if you need website screenshots or captures, this is a great, free option.

Synergy

Posted by oc | Cross-Platform, Free, Macintosh, Utilities, Windows | Saturday 13 June 2009 12:59

I have two computers on my desk at work, a PC and a Mac, and occasionally my laptop joins them. At home, I have two PCs next to each other. In both cases, I use the open source software Synergy to control all the computers with a single mouse and keyboard. Synergy allows the cursor to move from screen to screen as though they were one computer. Whichever computer has the cursor also has the keyboard focus. What’s more, Synergy brings the clipboard contents with it (only text between Macs and PCs last I checked).

Just choose one computer to be the server — the computer with the mouse and keyboard attached — and the rest connect as clients. Synergy runs inside the operating system, so don’t expect to modify BIOS settings or select startup options with a remote keyboard.

Installation is easy under Windows (works with Windows 95 through Vista). There is no installer or configuration tool for Macintosh, but the online documentation is quite extensive, and even includes step-by-step instructions to have to launch automatically.

Configuring Synergy  uses a somewhat confusing interface.  You have to identify each computer which will be connected (even the host) and how the different screens “touch” each other. You have to tell it how to get out from each screen, even if it is the opposite of the way you got on to it.  During initial setup you may find your cursor “stranded” on a screen with no way off. Exiting Synergy on that computer will return your cursor to the main screen.

I even leave the Synergy client running on my laptop, so when I open it at work, I can control it with the same keyboard and mouse I always use.

While it isn’t for everyone, there are plenty of multiple-computer users that could benefit from the simplicity of one keyboard, one mouse, and no hassled (well, after setup).

Caffeine

Posted by oc | Macintosh | Sunday 12 April 2009 07:57

Sometimes the simplest things are the best. Sometimes I don’t want my laptop to go to sleep, or want it to stay awake for a few hours while I’m watching a movie or show. Caffeine solves this problem handily.

Lighthead offers Caffeine as a free app for Mac OS X which puts an icon in your menu bar which gives you one-click access to sleepless computing. Command-click the icon to get the menu options. Yes, you could muck about in the Energy Saver panel in System Preferences, but Caffeine is just a click away.

Coda

Posted by oc | Development, Macintosh | Saturday 21 March 2009 10:23

Choosing a development environment can be a challenge, but I’ve been happy with Coda from Panic Software. Coda offers most every tool I need in a single application. Targeted to web development, Coda offers syntax highlighting for over twenty languages & formats, searchable online manuals, and live preview using Safari’s WebKit. Sometimes the simplest things are nice, and the Sites pane with a thumbnail view of each site makes managing and finding dozens of sites a snap at work. Even though my office is a Microsoft shop, I use Coda as my primary coding system.

I keep finding new uses for Coda, too. Yesterday I was saved by the token-based find-and-replace, which let me perform complex actions without the effort of building regular expressions. I’ve used the Subversion support for pulling source code or projects in which I am interested; I’ve used the Publish function to unify local and remote directories over FTP without worrying about skipping or replacing files.

Coda isn’t free, but I depend on it every day, and gladly recommend it. They’re at version 1.6.3 and it just keeps getting better.

MarcoPolo

Posted by oc | Macintosh, Utilities | Friday 20 March 2009 22:11

For the mobile Mac user, managing multiple network locations, different printers, network shares, and more can be time-consuming and painful.MarcoPolo can save time and keep you sane.

With rules including Wireless SSIDs, connected USB devices, open applications, the time, even keyboard illumination sensors, you can automate changes to your system configuration at home, the office, even the corner coffee shop.

MarcoPolo 2.5 is free. It is no longer maintained but I’ve encountered no bugs, and 3.0 is in the works, so keep an eye on it.

Update: Version 2.5.1 is available which works properly with Snow Leopard.