by David Sparks

 

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9:09AM

Macworld 2008 Sessions Online and Free

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I spent most of my time at Macworld connecting with friends and collecting promotional shirts from vendors. (I think I ended up with seven). I didn't register to attend any of the sessions except those on the show floor.

Well today I discovered that video for most (all?) of the sessions is now online for free at Macworld Encore. The presentations include the keynote slides and are very well done by some of the smartest people in the Mac community. I don't know when I'm going to find time, but I am definitely going to watch several of these.
8:58AM

Default Folder X Gets an Upgrade

Default Folder X.png


One of my favorite Mac applications, Default Folder X, got a new release this week. In addition to the usual bug fixes there are several new features including the following:

* Added an option to display the toolbar as a gray sidebar for those users that don't like the HUD look.

* The preview generator has been rewritten, greatly improving performance and reliability, especially on Mac OS 10.4. Previews are also now created for many types of text files that weren't supported before on Leopard, and text, html, and rtf files now have previews under Tiger.

* Copy and Paste now work in Default Folder X's Spotlight keyword windows.

* Provided an option to turn off graphical UI effects like windows fading in and out, animated window resizing, and menus swooshing around.

* If you drag the preview window smaller, it will stay that size when another preview is displayed. To return the behavior to the default "automatic resizing" mode, resize the preview window so its lower edge is at the bottom of your screen.

I'm a big fan of Default Folder X. I reviewed it here and did a somewhat dated screencast on it here.
11:20PM

iPhones Everywhere

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My wife was tied up with her business over the weekend and I spent Sunday chasing my daughter around Disneyland. When we weren't chasing Micky, my six year old budding Mac geek pointed out to me every iPhone she saw. Guess what? She saw a lot of iPhones! At one point we were sitting in a restaurant waiting for a seat and there were 8 people with their phones out. Five iPhones (not including mine which was in my pocket), two RIMs, and a Razr. Now I know this wasn't scientific by any stretch of the imagination but still it was telling that Apple got something right with the iPhone. Hopefully they'll continue to innovate with the platform and make it something worthy of such enthusiastic use. When is that SDK showing up again?
2:56PM

Leopard 10.5.2 Installed. Nothing Blew Up.

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In case you haven't read yet, today Apple released Leopard 10.5.2. The update weighed in at 180mb on my Intel MacBook Pro. I spurned common sense and didn't bother with the combo updater and instead just did the automatic update. I've been running it a few hours now with no problems. Apple has a long list of updates. A few of them are of note to me and deserve comment.

Back to my Mac - Adds support for more third-party routers.

I am very curious to see how much this sorts out Back to My Mac. I've never quite got it working and not had time to figure it out. Actually, I keep waiting for the Macbreak Tech guys to set me straight on it.

Dock - Updates Stacks with a List view option, a Folder view option, and an updated background for Grid view.

Amen! I actually have gotten used to the new system but I know this was driving a lot of people crazy.

Desktop - Addresses legibility issues with the menu bar with an option to turn off transparency in Desktop & Screen Saver preferences.

This is another one that wasn't bothering me so much. Nevertheless, it is definitely less transparent now.

Mail - Mail now automatically disables the (unsupported) third-party plugin GrowlMail version 1.1.2 or earlier to avoid issues.

Mail has been a little wonky for me lately. I suspected Growl and turned it off but it still hasn't been as stable as before. I'm hoping 10.5.2 fixes that. So far so good.
11:24AM

Mac Roundtable Podcast - Take 2

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While at Macworld, I went out for lunch with a bunch of my podcasting and new media pals. We all sat around shooting the breeze about Apple and other things technology and it was a really great time. In fact, we had so much fun that we decided to start recording these little chats. However, rather than add another Applecentric podcast to the mix, we joined forces the Mac Roundtable gang.

The result is a bigger rotating cast and hopefully more frequent shows. Either way, I joined in on the roundtable that published today. In it we discussed, among other things, the MacBook Air, the new iPhone and iPod Touch configurations, uninterruptible power supplies, and the iPhone SDK. Give it a listen.
11:37AM

Changing Icons in OS X

I've had a few readers write asking how to change the look of icons in OS X since I posted the set of glass folders last week. The easiest way is to buy a copy of CandyBar 3. That, however, will cost you $29. If you want to do it by hand that is also possible with the following steps.

First you will have a file for which you want to change the icon. Here is a rtf file that deserves some attention.

Icon 1.jpg


Next you need to find a new icon. There are a variety of sources on the interweb. One of my favorites is Interfacelift where I got this clone soldier icon.

icon 6.png


Now copy the new icon by clicking once on it and then pressing ...

command c.png


Now go back to the file that is to get a new icon. First click on it and then press ...

command I.png


This opens the information panel for that file which should look something like this.

icon 3.png


Now comes the tricky part. Click on the icon in the information panel once. It should then have a faint little blue halo on it.

icon 5.jpg


Once the icon has the blue glow then you paste the new icon you copied by clicking ...

Command v.png


That is it. Close the information panel and you should be good.

icon 7.png


Sometimes OS X is a little slow updating the icon but it generally happens right after you close the information panel.

If you decide you want to return a file to its default icon, you just give it the blue halo in the information panel and then click ...

command x.png


Just to give an example of how crazy this can get, here is my daughter's dock. Whenever I use her computer it takes me five minutes to find Safari ... which is coincidentally (this week) the peace symbol.

Sams Dock.jpg



12:23AM

A Better Mac Volume Adjustment

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Hitting the built in volume buttons on your Mac is great for quickly raising or lowering your volume but what about when you want to lower or raise the volume just a little bit. Once again Apple has a solution that they don't tell anyone about.

Hit the following key combination ....

Shift + Option + Volume up/down

Now you have four clicks per volume notch. Note that if you are doing this on a laptop you may also need to hold down the function key depending on how your keyboard is set up. So the next time your significant other/roomate/neighbor/local peace officer ask you to turn it down, you can ... barely.

***note
This may only be a Leopard feature. If anyone still running Tiger can confirm or deny this, drop me a note or a comment.


***Update

Thanks to reader Stephen who confirmed this does not work on Tiger.


12:09AM

Review - TuneRanger

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I have a confession. I’ve had iPods for years and own more music than I care to admit. While I did get it all ripped into iTunes a long time ago, I’ve never really been an iTunes power user. That has been changing the last few months though. Recently I’ve started making smart playlists and autosyncing lists to get more out of my music library. This is great but it has also exposed a problem. Fancy playlists depend on good metadata like how you’ve rated a song or when the was the last time you played it. Since I have portions of my library on my laptop and a big library on the family desktop (not to mention an iPod and iPhone), keeping all of this data in sync could be a real chore. This problem gets magnified when my wife and kids get involved. I like Hannah Montana as much as the next dad, but that doesn’t mean she gets to share space with Thelonius Monk and Debussy on my iPod.

While at Macworld this year I found a small company named Acertant Technologies that had a booth right behind the Apple area, that section where all of the best little developers seem to land. Anyway, I met Manny Menendez who showed me an application he developed for precisely my iTunes problems called TuneRanger. 

TuneRanger connects all of your iTunes libraries. It then compares the libraries and allows you to share data between them. This doesn’t just include the music files but also all of the metadata.
When you first open TuneRanger it gives you a window that shows your local iTunes library and any other libraries on your network. It then gives you drop down lists of playlists on both libraries and gives you several options. When choosing what to sync you have a variety of filters available including duplicate files, license IDs, file types, genre, artists, album names, and song titles. You can also instruct TuneRanger to trash files marked for deletion or move them to a different folder for later review and deletion.

TuneRanger 1.jpg


You can force one library upon another or synchronize them. Once you give TuneRanger its instructions it does a preliminary analysis and gives you a dialog telling you what it is going to do and offering you a chance uncheck any specific action. Once you tell it to go, TuneRanger then does the syncrhonization. This doesn’t just work with other computers in your network. It also works with your iPod. You can actually pull music off your iPod and place it in your iTunes library with TuneRanger. TuneRanger is also multiplatform so if part of your library is on a Vista or XP box, you still can synchronize. Since I’ve purged all PC’s from my home, I was unable to test this feature.

TuneRanger 2.jpg


Before using TuneRanger, I treated our desktop computer as the source for all iTunes music. All music had to be ripped on that machine and all iTunes purchases had to be made on that machine. I then had to manually copy the stuff I wanted over to my laptop usually losing all metadata. TuneRanger has really liberated me of this whole process. I can now finally use the iTunes button on my iPhone or buy music on my laptop. It is no trouble to then later upload it to the desktop computer with TuneRanger. It really is that easy.

The application costs $29.99 and includes 5 single platform licenses so you will have no trouble getting it on all of the Macs in your household. There is also a free trial available at www.acertant.com. You should be warned though, since getting TuneRanger on my Mac, I’ve spent a lot more money downloading music.
9:10PM

OS X Glass Folder Icons

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I was looking for a certain widget on Apple's download site and stumbled upon these glass folder icons. I downloaded and installed them and I love them. Not only do they look better than the standard Leopard folder set, they are much easier to distinguish making them easier to use. You can download them here.
9:03AM

40 Years Young

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Recently I turned 40. I wasn't planning on posting about this but I decided whenever you add a zero to your age, it is probably noteworthy.

The funny thing is I remember when I thought 40 was ancient. Now I feel like I'm just getting started. I'm very fortunate however to be passionate about many things: my family, my clients, music, and (of course) my mac. With so many interests, I'm simply too busy to feel old. It doesn't prevent me, however, from being reflective about technology.

I am fortunate to be the first generation to grow up with computers. The first computer I worked on was a Radio Shack Color Computer.

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It had 4k of Ram. Not 4 Megs. Not 4 Gigs. 4k. We used to program little basic programs in it and the save medium was a cassette player. When they came out with the 8k model we couldn't figure out for the life of us what you would ever need 8k for.

After that came some fun with the Atari series (first an Atari 400 and then an Atari ST)...
atari400a.jpg


Hours upon hours in my college computer lab on Macs that I couldn't afford....

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and then 20 years of forgettable PC's leading up to my late switch to OS X. Over the course of my life computers have changed our society in just about every way imaginable from curing disease to playing games (not to mention a little thing called the Interweb). So in addition to celebrating the fact that I have yet again cheated death for another year, I look forward as I get older (remember, only the good die young!) to see just how much better things get.