by David Sparks

 

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4:27PM

Screencast 7 - Safari Tips and Tricks


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Screencast 7 discusses some of my favorite Safari tips and tricks including Inquisitor, keyboard shortcuts, email shortcuts, and (of course) Quicksilver.

 You can Download it Directly Right Here


or better yet subscribe in the iTunes store



Macsparky Screencasts


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9:20PM

Compacting Sparse Disk Images

A lot of you have seen my screencast on how to make an encrypted sparse disk image. As I explained in the screencast, sparse disk images grow when add files into them but don't shrink when you pull files out. As my sparse disk images used to bloat I would occaisionnally make a new one and copy the files into it and discard the old image. Recently however I discovered an automator workflow that compacts an existing sparse image without requiring you to take all those insane steps I used to. So lets walk through it now.

Step One ... Load Automator


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Now some of you may be Automator veterans but for me it is just that funny looking icon I always pass over.

Step Two ... First Script


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Click on the "Finder" category in the Library column then click and drag "Get Selected Finder Items" from the Actions Column into the work area of Automator.

Step Two ... Second Script


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Click on the "Automator" category in the Library column then click and drag "Run Shell Script" from the Actions Column into the work area of Automator.

Step Three ... Change Pass Input


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Change the "pass input" drop down from "to sdnin" to "as arguments"

Step Four ... Remove Text from the Shell Window


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Step Five ... Fill in the Window


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Type in the following in the window....

hdiutil compact "$@"

Step Six ... Save It


Go to Automator's File menu and "Save as Plug-in". Give it a name like "Compact Sparse Image". Also make sure "Plug-in for:" category says "Finder".

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Using the Workflow

1. Find your sparse image in the finder.
2. Make sure it is unmounted
3. Cntrl(Right)-Click, Mouse down to Automator and run your script.

Now all of the above probably sounds like a lot of work but it really is not. Once you have it set up you can regularly compact your sparse images. Let me know if it works for you.



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7:07PM

Review - MarsEdit 2.0

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So I’ve been blogging now for six months and until very recently, I did it all in the Wordpress web client. There really is nothing wrong with that. It is perfectly fine. Of course it is also perfectly fine scrub your floors with a toothbrush and self perform your own dental work. I wouldn’t recommend it, but it is possible.

I’d heard about applications that allow you to blog without a browser but never got around to trying any of them out until red-sweater released version 2.0 of MarsEdit. I’ve now been using it for about three weeks and I’m very pleased with it. MarsEdit is a blogging tool that, at its most basic level, allows you to write and edit posts, import media, and upload your genius to your blog without having to wrestle your way through the online editors.

It works with most of the big blogging engines. I’ve been using it with Wordpress both on my wordpress.com site and, since moving my blog to its own server, on the macsparky.com server with no troubles whatsoever.

The main window allows you to see your text and html as you type. Fortunately for me, it does most of the html work for you. I can add links, photos, technorati tags, and a variety of other coding that, frankly, I’d have no clue how to pull off without MarsEdit doing the work for me. It also pulls my online tags down from my site so I can mark up and add new tags right from MarsEdit.
In addition to the local media support, version 2.0 also allows for Flickr support which is nice for those of you who blog from your Flickr photos. I wish, however, that it supported the OS X media browser.

When my eyes start getting bleary, I can also print out drafts of my entries and proof-read them on paper before uploading. A practice which I sadly do not do often enough. Since that “post” button seems irresistable to me, I often end up posting entries with grammatical errors. I’m not talking your simple comma splice. I’m talking in your face mis-spellings and conjugation errors that would make Strunk and White turn in their graves. Once again MarsEdit to the rescue. You can edit and repost within MarsEdit.

Version 2.0 also supports html markup macros. While in principle I understand what that is, in practice I’m clueless so you are on your own to figure out that feature. I do know that I was able to copy in an html snippet on National Talk Like a Pirate Day and it was ready to post a very nice code embedded entry at MacSparky. Thankfully, common sense prevailed and I didn’t push the “Post” button that time.
Wordpress does not play nicely with Safari 3 so it was even more onerous for me blogging through the browser because Safari would work to a certain point and then fail. I kept forgetting to open Camino and as a result, many times I’d end up writing an entry twice. Using MarsEdit, I can now easily write and upload without any browser.

You can download a free 30-day trial of MarsEdit at Red-Sweater.com. If it hooks you it will cost $29.95. For MarsEdit veterans, the upgrade will set you back $9.95.




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11:02AM

The Super Secret Saved Indicator

A good friend, Gabe Wilson, showed me a very cool trick native to OS X regarding saved files. If you look at the top left corner in the close, minimize, maximize bubbles you may sometimes see a small dot in the middle of the red circle. This dot is telling you something. It means the current document is not saved. So if you press the red button and that dot is in it, very bad things will happen. Cats will live with dogs, the universe may implode, and worse yet, you've lost your document.

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Now if instead of your dot, you see an "X", you are good to go. Document saved. You are free to close and move on.

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9:08AM

Stop Procrastinating

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I recently finished an excellent book on why we procrastinate by Neil Fiore called "The Now Habit". What I really like about this book is that it doesn't give you the usual slogans for fighting procrastination ("Just Do It", "Man Up", etc..) and instead talks about the way we humans are wired and why we procrastinate. There are a variety of reasons. For some of us it is a defense mechanism, others are afraid of success. We all have our own groups of hang-ups. Either way, he goes deep into these motivations and allows you to dig yourself out in a way that is both enlightening and uplifting. I strongly recommend the read if these things interest you.

There was also a good article posted this morning at GetRichSlowly.org that is a little less cerebral yet still helpful. My favorite tip there is "Don't Multitask". I really think anyone that multitasks on purpose is making a mistake. Just do one thing at a time. Do it right. Anyway, you can check out the article right here.




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10:26PM

Lucky Number 12,000

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Well I've been doing this blog a few months now and noticed tonight my total views just hit 12,000. Probably a drop in the bucket in internet terms but still I'm so pleased to have loyal readers. I enjoy all of your emails and comments and look forward to learning more and growing this blog with all of your help. Google hasn't really found MacSparky on the new server in that the older wordpress blog (which is no longer being updated) is still getting most of the search hits but we will get the new blog rolling soon I think. Thanks gang!
8:56PM

Microsoft Office 2008 Peek

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Today the Microsoft Apple gang went live with their site showing off some of the new features of Office 2008. It looks ... interesting. I'll reserve judgment until they have something I can use but for the meantime I'm in no hurry. Pages and Scrivener are working out just fine.




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10:47PM

Making the Perfect Steak

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Okay, so this really has nothing to do with Macs, productivity, or any of my other usual topics but it was just too good a tip not to pass on. In short, you salt it up (a LOT of salt) about an hour before cooking and then rinse and dry it before putting it on the grill. There are all sorts of whiz bang chemistry explanations but in short it makes a very tasty steak (and works on chicken too). Check it out here.


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10:18PM

Review - EagleFiler


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Like a lot of people, I’ve been coming to the slow realization that I need a way to organize my digital life. Gone are the days when the sum total of the “data” on our computers was a 5 1/4 floppy of WordPerfect files. We now store documents, pictures, sound files, video. My bills arrive in my email box and I’m constantly bombarded with snippets of digital information I need to record or lose. Quickly it becomes overwhelming.

I tackled this in phases. It started out with a series of nested folders and has graduated to Yojimbo and Yep databases. This week I took a look at a newer entry in the data management game, EagleFiler.

EagleFiler is by the same guy that did Spam Seive and that, in my book, gives the program instant credibility. EagleFiler has several features which distinguish it from other information managers. It loads up with the familiar three pane window. Folders on the left, file lists on the top, and images on the bottom. If you can navigate iTunes, you can navigate EagleFiler. I like the User Interface. It is clean and doesn’t get in my way.

Unlike some of the other data management programs, EagleFiler seeks to organize all of your data. You can drop just about anything into it including mail, Web pages, PDF files, word processing documents, and images. Importing is accomplished by dragging or using the import hot key which defaults at F1. The NetNewsWire support is nice and Safari pages also come in really clean with images, links and the works. When you hit F1, it makes a satisfying “click” and you know the document is captured. It also has Growl support.

Once they are in you can do a variety of things with them. For those of you who like folders you can make a slew of them. Smart folders, nested folders, you name it. For the “searchers” among us it has full support for tagging and you can search the database with a variety of fields or even a wide open “Spotlight” style search that even pulls words out of the source documents. It also does Boolean searches which I find very helpful in my larger work databases. Another thing about EagleFiler is the search is really fast. It is much faster than Spotlight but also churning through a much smaller database.

If you like to use OS X’s comment field you will love the “note” feature in EagleFiler. It allows you to use rich text and several other formatting options not available in the native comments. If your email box is getting out of control, EagleFiler will pull and index your email. I played with this feature but have to admit I like MailSteward better as an archival tool. The ability to include select emails with specific libraries should not, however, be discounted. It is quite useful. It also imports your MailTags metadata. Unfortunately, there is no .Mac sync. I’m not even sure that is practical in light of the multiple libararies.

One thing I like about EagleFiler is the data is kept in its native format.  It is not sucked into some proprietary database but instead dumped in an EagleFiler created set of nested folders. This means that if you stopped using EagleFiler, you would still have your data. This is important.  I have a feeeling our information managers in five years will be very different from what we are using now and I want to make sure I can carry my data forward.

Another nice feature is the ability to use multiple libraries.  This feature distinguishes EagleFiler from some of the other information managers and can be both a blessing and a curse.  If you don’t give it some thought when setting up multiple libraries you can find yourself searching for data in the wrong database.  That being said, I think multiple libraries are great. It allows me to set up separate databases for separate projects.

I’ve been using Yojimbo now for some time and while these programs are similar, they have several differences. Yojimbo only supports one database and puts its data into a single database. This is not really so much of a problem since it is so easy to export from Yojimbo. Yojimbo also has some data specific fields, such as serial numbers and the like while EagleFiler seems more flexible in organization with nested folders. Which of these two programs work for you really depends on your needs and how you work. Frankly, I’m using them both quite effectively. Using EagleFiler’s custom libraries, I have created several databases for some of my more complex work projects. These databases have hundreds of pdfs, emails, notes, and documents all easily searchable with EagleFiler’s powerful tools. I have a program on my PC box at the office that is supposed to do the same thing. The only difference is it cost a lot more money and crashes both randomly and often.

You can download a trial copy or buy EagleFiler for $40 at c-command.com.



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8:33PM

The Ringtone Game Continues

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Apple: Release iTunes 7.4. Apple ringtones only!
Mac Community: iToner, easy hacks, renaming hack. Neener neener.
Apple: Release iTunes 7.4.1 Apple ringtones only!
Mac Community: iToner (revised), multiple hacks, MakeiPhoneRingtone. Neener neener.
Apples: Release iTunes 7.4.2 Apple Ringtones only!

Anybody see a trend here?

I'm going to wait on the iTunes upgrade until they figure out how to load ringtones again. I really like waking up to Over the Moon and the version for sale on iTunes doesn't support it. Keep up the good work Rogue Amoeba!


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