gateway

Fun with Fink

Fink: more than a funny name, it is a gateway to the best free software the GNU/Linux community has to offer. With the help of FinkCommander, you can use Fink without touching the Terminal.

Fink and Fink Commander

What is Fink? To answer that question, we’ll have to delve a little into the world of Linux. Each distribution of Linux has a package manager that works like OS X’s Software Update. However, Linux package managers track and install third party GNU applications as well.

Fink acts as a package manager for OS X, providing access to a library of GNU programs and libraries that have been ported to OS X by the Fink Project. To get your own Fink, download the installer, run it and then install FinkCommander (included with the Fink installer) to install a GUI.

I should mention that applications downloaded through Fink will require a form of X Windows on your system. Don’t worry, this isn’t as complicated as it sounds. X11 for 10.3 is an easy download from Apple. If you’re a Jaguar user and didn’t download Apple’s X11 beta, you can install X11 using XonX.

Update: Thanks to James for this download link to the Apple X11 beta for 10.2 here.

Once you have Fink and Fink Commander installed, you can fire up Fink and go shopping for GNU apps. There are two ways you can install an application with Fink – install a precompiled binary or compile the source code yourself. For the later you’ll need to install developer tools from Apple.

finkcommander Fun with Fink

So, is there anything worth downloading from Fink? You bet. I’d recommend grabbing the KDE window manager. KDE is, simply stated, the Aqua of Linux. It is easily installed through a convenience package in Fink that bundles all the required files together. If you install the full bundle of KDE, you’ll have added a full GUI including games, office, internet and utility applications.

Once you have a window manager in place, you’ll probably want to grab the Gimp. This free Photoshop rival is also available via Fink. Now this is a good time to talk about versions. Fink supports 10.1,10.2 and 10.3 in varying degrees. The most interesting and recent packages are available to Panther users. Based on your OS and Fink versions, you’ll have access to a different set of ported software. If you like to keep things simple, stick with the default stable binary builds. If you like to live on the edge, you can take on the newest unstable versions.

There are too many cool free applications available through Fink to mention them all here. But, once you have your installation going, you can have your crack at anything from IRC clients to genealogy tools. And for veterans of the Classic Environment, you’ll find the ability to run programs from another OS easy and useful.

That’s all for this week. Have fun with Fink!

Brian

Specialized Browsers

Browsers are increasingly our gateway to information, communication and more. Tabs have made it easier to manage multitasking – but with so much work and play on the web it is really too much for a single application.

Thankfully, a new breed of integrated browsers make is easier to dedicate light, fast browsers to different purposes, be they browsing, email, file management or more.

NagaraBrowser

For the fans of full-screen work, this is a great way to go. This browser turns your desktop into a browser – controlled by a menu item. For those looking for an immersive web experience, this is it. Don’t be scared, the website is in Japanese. All you need to know is where the download link is.

DeskBrowse

This browser takes a different angle at desktop integration. DeskBrowse features a full-scree mode but also works out of a fly-out shelf on the side of your screen. This choice is great for quick access to web applications like Gmail. Like most of this week’s picks, this browser is based on Apple’s WebKit (the rendering engine in Safari).

SunriseBrowser

Sunrise is fast, with a sleek interface and smart use of transparency. It supports quick save-to-pdf and graphical (screen shot based) bookmarks. It looks and feels sharp with live page scaling. Sunrise is also a WebKit browser.

Shiira

Shiira also makes use of transparency, but ditched the drop-down menus and panes for floating transparent windows for bookmarks and more. The browser includes support for tabs. There’s even an alternative button set here. The most recent version requires Tiger, but a Panther version is our there too.

Songbird

This pick is primarily a jukebox, but I’ve included it here because of its cleaver browser integration. Songbird is build on Firefox’s XUL platform and as such includes the Gecko rendering engine. The multimedia capability on Songbird scans webpages for playable music and video files and lists them in a pane for quick access.

Songbird also supports extensions that enable iPod support and more. The player supports a long list of file types and shows a lot f promise for the future. This browser/media player is the app of choice for MySpace/indie band fans.

The Mac has a ton of great free browsers that offer interesting integration possibilities. There’s sure to be a specialized browser to fit your needs out there.

Brian

Apple drops the price on the 1GB iPod shuffle, announces 2GB model

07shuffle fam 20080219 213353 Apple drops the price on the 1GB iPod shuffle, announces 2GB modelPersonally, I hate the iPod shuffle. But it serves, if nothing else, as Apple’s least expensive gateway to the iTunes ecosystem. Today, that gateway got even less expensive. Previously selling for USD$79, the 1GB iPod shuffle (available in bland silver, disgustingly teal blue, putrid green, substandard purple and a passible (PRODUCT) RED special edition) is now selling for USD$49.

The price drop means that entering the world of iTunes is now $30 cheaper. It also means anyone who won a 1GB iPod on eBay for anything more than $50 after shipping is probably already weak from kicking themselves upon hearing the news this morning.

To make matters worse for recent buyers, for $10 less than 1GB shuffles were selling yesterday those willing to wait a little while can buy a 2GB iPod shuffle. That’s twice the musical uncertainty !

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