by David Sparks

 

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2:34PM

Sparks on Tech - More thoughts on the Kindle

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I've started doing an occasional opinion piece for my friend Steve Stanger on TheMacAttack podcast. I did my first installment in episode 81 that released today. For my first recording for Steve, I expanded a bit on my opinions of the Kindle and Sony readers. As I've blogged before, I think the combination of DRM and no proper annotation leaves these products in the category of "toys" more than "tools".

Having publicly said that, I heard Andy Ihnatko (whom I think is both hilarious and much more tech-savvy than myself) extolling the virtues of his review Kindle. Andy's praise aside, my opinion still hasn't changed. I still don't think those products are ready for use until I can put material on the machine as easy as I can my Mac and annotate it as easily as I can with my pencil. When they pull that off, I'll be first in line.
11:03PM

SuperDuper Haiku

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Don't get me wrong. I like TimeMachine for backups. It has already saved my bacon in ways SuperDuper can not. Yet . . . alas . . . there is a part of me that can not help wistfully thinking about that bootable backup. I've resorted to stalking the ShirtPocketSoftware website waiting for that Leopard release. Anyway, this has inspired me to Haiku

Oh Super Duper
On Leopard you are not . . . Yet
The new cat awaits



Man . . . I really shouldn't post after 14 hour days in the office.
10:51PM

Is that a Geeky Shirt Under Your Tree?

There are a few entrepreneurial folks out there looking to cash in on your Mac Geekery. Specifically, InsantelyGreatTees has a variety of Mac-centric shirt including, among others, one with a 30 year timeline of Mac history and another humorously called "It Never Happened" with just a big Command-Z.

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Of course, if you are feeeling fiesty, FakeSteveJobs is peddling a shirt that says, "Everytime you buy a Dell, a baby seal dies." Now THAT is poetry.

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9:19PM

Parallels Beta - Life on the Edge

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Parallels has worked in Leopard but not been entirely consistent. I noticed today that a new beta was released that was supposed to give better Leopard compatability. I installed it without event and am running it now with no excitement. It seems to be a bit more stable than the prior build. I'll keep you posted.
5:57PM

HBO's Rome - My Latest Fixation

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I don't watch a lot of television but once in awhile something grabs me. About 3 months ago I started renting the DVDs for HBO's Rome from my local Blockbuster. I finished the last one recently. Rome is, essentially, a 20 hour miniseries following the rise and assassination of Caesar and the following power plays that led to the rise of Augustus. This is not a show to watch with kids or the faint of heart. There is blood, gore, nudity and sex. More than once, my wife asked me, "exactly what kind of movies are you renting Dave?"

I thought the acting was very good. Back in school I read the writings of Cicero and had a great deal of respect for him. The actor did such a good job of portraying him in a negative light that I'm going to have to re-read Cicero again. The production not only related the doings of great men but also the common people of the age. The DVDs have a feature where a historian will occasionally pop in a little text blurb to explain some historical fact related to the story that I found very interesting and educational.

Anyway, if you are comfortable with the very adult themes and content, you may want to give it a try.
1:07PM

MacSparky is No Longer Dead to Google

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I've posted before, along with pestering friends and fellow geeks, with my big MacSparky problem since moving it to its own server. Specifically, I was dead to Google (and every other search engine). I knew this must be a simple problem but it was a bit disheartening to see that little box in my web stats that shows nobody was stumbling upon my ramblings with a search engine. The good news was that I still have a pretty good following of people that carry my feed and the numbers were still pretty acceptable. Maybe that is why it took me so long to get to the root of it.

Regardless, through a friend I talked to someone at Google and they were baffled. I wrote several emails to my hosting provider, Dreamhost, to which they very nicely told me it may just because my content isn't that good. Well, THAT most certainly could not be the problem.

Last night I had some time on my hands and decided I was going to go through every line of every menu on my Wordpress settings and sure enough, buried deep inside, there was a check box called "Privacy" with a big ugly check next to it. I know I never set that but, alas, there it was. I unchecked it and this morning I find that MacSparky.com is no longer one great big black hole in the internet and people are actually finding me again. So there you have it, operator error at the root of my problems . . . again.
3:46PM

MenuBar Apps - Jumpcut

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I'm going to do a series of posts on some of my favorite menubar applications. I thought I'd start with Jumpcut. Jumpcut is an application that provides "clipboard buffering" — that is, access to text that you've cut or copied, even if you've subsequently cut or copied something else. The goal of Jumpcut's interface is to provide quick, natural, intuitive access to your clipboard's history.

In addition to pulling your text snippets off the menubar, it also can pop them up inside your document with a bezel activated by CNTRL-Option-V.

This app is really helpful when writing just about anything and free! Check it out.
3:27PM

AppFresh is Fully Leopard Compatible

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I've written before about how much I love this little application that makes sure you have the most current version of your software applications. They have announced that it is now fully Leopard compliant although I must admit I used the prior version in Leopard with no problems.
3:22PM

Mac 101

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I've been helping a switcher friend get up to speed on the Mac. One resource I gave him was TUAW's Mac 101 series. He reports these entries have been really helpful to him so I thought I'd share it here. Head on over to Mac 101 and I guarantee you'll learn a thing or two.
3:33PM

Review - FileChute

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If you would like to listen to this review, I recorded and published is as part of the MacReviewCast #135.

Like a lot of computer users I am constantly sending files around. It is easy enough with small files but what happens when the files get too big for an email. I send family movies to relatives in London and the Philippines. I send Keynote Quicktime movies to clients and judges. I even send the occasional AIF file to my good friend Tim at the Macreviewcast.

Well, up until recently I always did this through Pando or some other ubiquitous online service that agreed to be my middle man in large file transfers. This works well enough but if the file sizes get too large, those options start costing money. Furthermore, it always requires the participation of the other side. Sure I can tell my brother-in-law in London to get a Pando account, but can I really say that to a client or judge?

Well once again the excellent Mac developer community has come to the rescue. Yellow Mug Software’s $17.95 FileChute does the trick. This little application puts a box on your screen with a ... well ... chute. You then drag any file or group of files you want into the chute and the application prompts you to send it as-is or archived in dmg, zip, or tar formats. You can password the archive (or not) and then FileChute uploads it to your internet location of choice.

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I’ve got a .mac account and it works flawlessly. I also uploaded some files to the MacSparky server space and it works just as well. The first time you do this you need to tell FileChute where to send your file but after that there is no more fiddling required. I found the set up with a .Mac account ridiculously easy. On my own server I had to give it a bit more information but it still only took a few minutes to configure.

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Once the file is uploaded, FileChute gives you a link that you can put in an email, read over the phone, or tie to the leg of a pigeon. Your recipient just needs to click the link and the file downloads. No more do your recipients need to sign up for an “account” somewhere. No more is retrieving files such a chore. Click and download. It doesn’t matter if the recipient is on a Mac, Windows, or Linux. This really is FileChute’s greatest feature. The recipient does not have to be tech savvy to get your files. Suddenly, it is possible for me to send files to people who would otherwise have no clue as to how to retrieve them.

FileChute also cleans up after itself. You can set an expiration for the files to self delete in a certain number of days or you can tell it to delete the file immediately.

I tested FileChute retrieving files on both Macs and PCs and I never had any problems. I’m sure there could be some issues if your router or firewall is particularly grumpy but that wouldn’t really be the fault of FileChute.

This review is of version 3.01 which I ran in Leopard on my MacBook Pro. It is universal binary. You can buy a license for FileChute for $17.95 at yellowmug.com. I’ve written the developer however, and Yellow Mug has agreed to offer 25% off that price if you use the coupon code MACSPARKY so now is your chance. They also have a free trial and a 60-day, money back guarantee, and free upgrades. If you find yourself routinely sending files that won’t fit in an email, you can’t go wrong with FileChute.