Below is a list of articles filed under the tag: mac.

Five free & useful OS X apps that you might not have heard about

February 18 2008

Here are a few freeware gems for OS X that I have found. They are the type of apps that you might not have used before but once you do, you’ll find yourself using them over and over again. Hope you find them as useful as I have!

App icon

Fluid

Fluid lets you turn your favourite web apps (and websites) into desktop apps. With fluid you can:

  • Launch the web app straight from the dock.
  • Hide it and unhide it just like an app. No more looking for that obscure tab.
  • Web apps can be a bit heavy and slow down your browser, now web app has it’s own instance so it wont effect your regular browsing.
  • If the app crashes then the app crashes! It wont take your whole browser with it.

Fluid is based on web-kit so it’s super-fast. However, if you prefer mozilla’s rendering engine then check out Prism.

Firefox 3 Beta

Firefox 3

The new Firefox UI looks positively scrumptious.

Yeah, everybody knows about Firefox. But, not all mac users are using Firefox 3 beta and they should be. Let me tell you why:

  • Firefox now actually feels like it belongs on mac, it even has a new default theme specially designed for OS X.
  • It doesn’t crash, Firefox 2 used to constantly crashed (for me anyway). I have been using FF3 beta as my primary web browser for two months now and it hasn’t crashed once.
  • It’s fast, much faster than Firefox 2.

Since this is a beta version you should probably create a separate firefox profile for Firefox 3 beta.

iBackup 2008

iBackup is an app that lets you automatically back up your files to a local folder or even a webdav folder (look under ‘View -> Profile Settings’). I’ve had experience with data loss before, it definitely happens. The interface is a bit messy but it does the job, combine it with a free 1GB box.net and you’ve just sorted yourself out with some free off-site backup!

If you’re like me then you use time machine already, so you may wonder why there is a need for off-site storage? I usually carry my macbook and my external hard drive around with me in a bag, what happens if that bag gets stolen? I use iBackup for about 300MB of files that I absolutely can not lose. I Leave it running overnight every couple of weeks.

Name Mangler

Name Mangler is a wonderful batch file renaming utility. It somehow manages to combine complex features into an amazingly easy to use interface (something which is frustratingly rare with free apps). Some features…

  • Droplets — Allows you to simply drop files onto an icon which does all the magic.
  • Conditional statements & nested counters — Gives you the ability to undertake complicated tasks.
  • Regular expressions — For those who want even more power.
  • Beautiful interface.

Name Mangler

Minuteur

Minuteur is a cute little app that does a very simple job but does it very well, it’s a countdown timer and stopwatch with a lovely interface. I use it for:

  • Keeping track of how much time is left until that pizza is done.
  • Staying Productive — I like to give myself goals like ‘get this done in 2 hours’. The remaining time bar helps you keep on schedule, it will even talk to you if you like… ’15 minutes remaining’.
  • Billing clients — You can tell Minuteur your hourly rate and it will tell you how much you’re earning.

That’s it

That’s it, five free and useful applications! Feel free to suggest your own in the comments.

Cramming OS X (and other stuff) onto an iPod

July 31 2007

My hard drive decided to die on me, it’s not the first time, I had a different hard drive die on me a few years ago (although, last time it was murdered by a massive speaker).

Anyway, I ordered a 160GB hard drive for my macbook and in the mean time I’m using a second generation 20GB iPod as my hard drive.

An initial install of OS X comes to over 14GB, which didn’t leave me much space for installing Adobe CS3 and other apps. After a bit of playing around I managed to get the install down to just over 5GB, here’s a rundown of what I did to slim down OS X, just in case anybody else finds themselves in the same position (or if you just want to have a small bit extra free space).

Printer Drivers (~1.5GB)

Macintosh HD>Library>Printer
I love the fact that you can plug in pretty much any printer into OS X and you’re good to go. This comes at a price though, OS X needs to store the drivers for every printer on your hard drive. Deleting this folder will mean that you will have to go searching the internet for printer drivers if you need them.

Applications (~2GB)

Macintosh HD>Applications
If you don’t need them then trash them. I dumped all of the iLife (iDVD is nearly a gig) and iWork apps.

Application support (~3.5GB)

Macintosh HD>Library>Application Support
Delete all of the related support files for the apps that you’ve dumped. This is where all the theme’s for iDVD, samples and audio loops for garageband etc… are stored.

Audio (~2.5GB)

Macintosh HD>Library>Audio>Apple Loops>Apple
2.5GB of loops and sound effect for iLife (Particularly garageBand)... Deleted!

Documentation (~140MB)

Macintosh HD>Library>Documentation>Applications>Apple
Now that I’ve deleted the iLife & iWork apps there’s no need for their documentation. You can save an extra 200MB by deleting the Mac OS X help files, I decided not to though.

Make your apps platform specific

Xslimmer strips PPC or Intel (depending on your platform) code from universal apps. It will also remove localizations that aren’t specific to your locale.

Go Monolingual (Up to 2GB)

Monolingual (Thanks Cormac) will remove unnecessary language resources from Mac OS X. It saved me 800MB but mileage varies.

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CODA Rocks

April 23 2007

Dave heartily endorses this product/service…

CODA - one window web development

I’ve been playing around with CODA for the past hour or so and it is really great, it somehow manages to be full of great features, stable and very fast. Truly amazing for a first release.

Download CODA
More Information about CODA

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