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Save your Mac for free!

This weeks edition of Freeloader Friday features a couple utilities that could save your Mac and speed it up.

BootCD

In times of woe (sad Macs, lost System Folders), there was always a way out: the startup disk. Nowadays, with Mac OS X it isn’t so simple to startup from a CD. You can boot from an install disk, but the good old days of a fully operational system on a disk are gone. Or are they?

BootCD is a utility that creates a fully bootable system disk. It also alows you to include self-contained applications on the disk as well. Though still in it’s 0.5 version, this utility is fully functional and could save you in a pinch.

Jaguar Cache Cleaner

This utility targets the left-over cache files that can accumulate on your disk. Keeping your caches clean can save disk space and increase stability in your applications.

So whether it’s through everyday maintenance or a bail out in a time of need, todays freebees could be just what your Mac needs.

See you next week with more indispensable freeware,

Brian

Optimize Your DeliciousExport

Brought to you by: James

Clearly, the problem with DeliciousExporter is that it exports your images as their original size and uses CSS to resize them in your browser. Why not resize these images before uploading? Why not indeed…. The following are the exact steps that I took to shrink my library from 13.8mb to 2.6mb.

1. Download and purchase EasyBatchPhoto ($18). Why purchase? Because you get a very ugly watermark thrown on every image if you don’t. Why EasyBatchPhoto? Because I’ve tried the rest and they just don’t work. Skip to step 1a, right after step 5, for special instructions on using Automator instead of EasyBatchPhoto.

2. Backup Delicious Library. You can do this by copying ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/ to an external hard disk or burn a CD with that directory.

3. Now, open ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/Images/ on your hard disk and delete every folder but “Plain Covers”.

4. Open your newly purchased EasyBatchPhoto. Choose whatever destination you want, set the scaling to “Stretch to fit” at 113×155 pixels, choose your desired scaling quality, set the format to “JPEG”, the quality to “80″, and make sure that “Preserve EXIF” is checked. At this point, you may want to add all of this as a preset. Why 113×155 pixels? Because that’s the size of the small, plastic-like image that will be displayed over your images in your newly exported library. Consequently, that is the size that the original images would have been resized to. Your settings should similar to the screenshot below.

ebp Optimize Your DeliciousExport

5. Find your “Plain Covers” folder at ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/Images/Plain Covers/ and drag it into the small box on the top-left corner of EasyBatchPhoto. Continue through the dialogue box and your photos will begin to convert. Move onward to step 6.

Use Automator instead of EasyBatchPhoto

1a. If you have Mac OS X v10.4.x, you can use Automator instead of EasyBatchPhoto for steps 1-5.

2a. Duplicate the “Plain Covers” folder in ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/ and drag this duplicate folder to your desktop.

3a. Launch Automator, select the contents of the Plain Covers duplicate, and drag them into the Workflow area.

4a. From the action area, select Preview/Scale Images and make sure that it occurs after the retrieval of the image files. Set this action to “To Size (pixels): 155″. Your settings should similar to the screenshot below.

asp Optimize Your DeliciousExport

5a. Execute the workflow and save it for later use.

6. Replace ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/Images/Plain Covers/ with your newly created “Plain Covers” folder.

7. Launch Delicious Library. You will be shocked by how pixelated your cover images are, but that’s why you made a backup of your library in step 2. Now, quit Delicious Library.

8. Launch DeliciousExporter. Make sure that “Export images” is checked, enter your desired email address, and export your library.

9. Once your library is exported, open one of the .html files in your browser. Your cover images are no longer pixelated. That’s because they are exactly the size that they would have been resized to via the CSS.

10. Congratulations, your exported library is now as optimized as it could get (unless you lower the image quality any further). You may now upload your library and restore Delicious Library by replacing ~/Library/Application Support/Delicious Library/ with your backup copy.

Just for fun, here’s what mine looks like:
library Optimize Your DeliciousExport

Boot Up

Boot time can be a moment of truth for drives on the fritz. These free utilities can put you in a more confident position dealing with troublesome installs.

mu Boot UpAppleJack

This app could really save you in a pinch. It is a script that can be launched from the command line in single-user-mode to repair the disk, repair privileges, delete caches and more. Could be a lifesaver.

mu Boot UpBootCD

We’ve featured this one before on Freeloader Friday, but it is worth mentioning again. This application creates a burnable, bootable image of your OS X install. You select the utilities and applications to include.

mu Boot UpCarbon Copy Cloner

Listed as shareware, this is actually $5 donation-ware. And it is worth much more. CCC backs up and syncs disks, including permissions, hidden files and boot-ability. The app also features a scheduling feature.

The props this week go to the freeware programmers that make these drive-saving applications.

Brian

mu Boot UpDownloads provided by MacUpdate