King

Silence the Embarrassing Pops

volumebez Silence the Embarrassing Pops

I’m sure this has happened to most of you. One day, you’re giving a presentation to an important audience. It could be a PowerPoint or graphics portfolio presentation for a future employer or client. It could also be a presentation of the Return of the King: Extended Edition for your family. Either way, this presentation is taking place on your Mac (probably a PowerBook or iBook) and being run through an external system (probably speakers or a projector). Before starting your presentation, you know that you need to lower the volume on your Mac. But, what you don’t know is that the talented (and challenged) technical staff in charge of setting up your presentation rig, have left all external speakers on their maximum volume. You press the volume lowering key on your keyboard, and an enormously loud popping sound blows every speaker, and renders your entire audience deaf (either momentarily or permanently).

Ok, maybe that hasn’t happened to you, but it’s happened to me and almost everyone I know. Don’t worry, the solution is simple. Just hold down the shift key while pressing your volume keys. Look Ma, no more popping sound!

Bonus Tips:

Try holding down the shift key while doing other tasks in Mac OS X, like minimizing a window, for example.

“And should your alert volume still be set to maximum, leaving acceptable sound but a deafening beep, hold down the option key and press any volume key to bring up the System Preferences->Sound panel. (This works with other keys, like screen and key brightness on powerbooks, as well.)” ~ Anonymous

“Try turning off ‘Play feedback when volume keys are pressed’ in the Sound preference pane. Then you have to press shift to *hear* the silly pops.” ~ CCS

Media Master

Macs have always been media machines. This week we’re going to look at some powerful, free media applications.

mu Media MasterVLC

VLC is the king of media, and the leading Open Source solution for streaming media. It doesn’t stop there, it supports dozens of formats including DVD and VCD.

vlc Media Master

VLC allows you to stream over a network, and gives you access to advanced options.

mu Media MasterHyperion

This utility allows you to convert WMA Windows Media audio into malleable formats. This is one to keep on your tool belt.

mu Media MasterMMT EZ

Here’s a free, easy to use video tool for converting video and burning it to VCD or DVD.

mmtez Media Master

Options allow you to adjust advanced options for video and audio encoding. It comes in a straight-forward GUI.

mu Media MasterMSI Man

Here’s another burning utility that allows you to burn multi-session discs. MSI does it using the new .msi format for creating multi-session images and burns them using Toast.

mu Media MasterMiNews

Okay, this one has nothing to do with this week’s theme.

MiNews Media Master

Yes, this is yet another RSS reader, but I included it because I found the interface clean and its OS integration convenient. Web page rendering and easy sharing with Address Book contacts.

There you go, a full set of free media tools. Feel free to stream, edit and burn to your heart’s content.

Brian

mu Media MasterDownloads provided by MacUpdate

Best Freeware of 2007

Free got better this year, here’s how:

Best on the Web: Safari 3 beta/MobileSafari/Safari for Windows beta

Its always a slug-fest for king of the browser heap. This year, we went with a browser that has expanded its reach to Windows and into your pocket. in 2007 Safari saw a promising beta (with features like contextual search and spell check), moved to Windows and best of all, debuted on the iPhone. Screenshot shows Safari 3 beta with excellent SafariStand add-on.

safari3bstand Best Freeware of 2007

Honorable mention goes to the fast and streamlined Opera 9.5 beta and the maturing social browser Flock.

Freeware Classic: NCX

In the year of the iPhone, it is only fitting to recognize Apple’s gone-but-not-forgotten handheld, the Newton. Kept alive by an active community, the free utility NCX is the OS X reincarnation of the old Newton desktop sync utility NCU. NCX is evidence of longevity off the Apple community.

NCX Best Freeware of 2007

It is also worth mentioning that past freeware classic winner OpenOffice.org released its first native OS X alpha version this year. So next year is already looking good.

Best App Killed by Apple: Virtue Desktop

No emails, we’re just having fun here. Not quite as bad as Tiger’s Dashboard/Konfabulator ruckus, it is fair to say that the ever-useful Virtue Desktop may have seen its day.

Back to my Mac will probably ding Chicken of the VNC, another great free utility.

Best System Extension: Think

think1 Best Freeware of 2007

This year was big on distraction-free computing. Think is a great screen-dimmer that looks cool and forces distractions into the background.

Honorable mention goes to Google Desktop Search for coming to the Mac (although it is debatable how much we needed it) and RCDefault a great little app for managing file associations.

Best Mac-only: Skitch

I don’t see how any windows user could not drool over this one. Skitch has a great interface, easy to use tools and flexible sharing options.

Honorable mention goes to xPad, a great free text editor and Bean, a free and slick word processor.

Best Technical Performance: MacFUSE

This gem came out of nowhere to add NTFS, WebDAV, SSH and FTP support for mounting remote file systems. MacFusion makes this new feature easy to use. Check it out.

iPhone App: AppSnap’s jailbreakme.com

It could not have been more simple or clever: free your iPhone or iPod touch by simply loading a webpage. Oh, and lets fix a major vulnerability while we’re at it. Genius!

Look for more in this space as 3rd party apps go legit in 2008!

Lifetime Achievement Award: ImageWell

imagewell2 Best Freeware of 2007

We first featured ImageWell in 2003 and it has tacked on features ever since. It was the first and remains among the best quick image editors and has since spawned a whole new category of Mac app.

Another great year! Be sure to check back with us in 2008 for more great Mac and iPhone freeware.

Brian