Life

Life after Spam

When you signed up for that exciting new email list you never suspected they’d sell you out or that you’d be deleting “Amazing Free Deal” emails for months. You were young and naive, but now you know better.

So what do you do about all that unsolicited “spam” email? Call the boys in blue at SpamCop. This week we’ll take a look at one of the most useful free services on the net.

For most of us, spam is a rude reality of working and playing on the Internet. You unsubscribe, complain and filter, but not even the Bulk Mail folder or Mail’s bounce feature can save you. You were doomed to the daily ritual of cleaning out the inbox… until now.

In all my experience in combating spam (yeah, I signed up for the same email list) I have found only one effective weapon, my ace in the hole. When I went to SpamCop, it was more out of a desire to spite the spammers than hope of deliverance. But SpamCop has brought my daily spam count from the 50′s and the 60′s to the 3′s and 4′s.

SpamCop is a spam reporting system. To make it work you need to do three things. First you open an account. SpamCop will assign you an email address which you will use to report spam. Second, you forward your spam email to the assigned address. If you use Entourage, use the free Spam Reporter Script to speed up this step. SpamCop replies back to each forwarded message with a link to a report. Follow this link and scroll to the “send report” button and you’re done.

From there on out, SpamCop takes over. Routers are called in for questioning and shady IP packets are hauled off in cuffs. Really I have no idea what happens, but what I do know is that it works.

A bit of advice to you: SpamCop reporting may seem time consuming or tedious at first, but hang in there. It is more than worth the time put in. This brings me to my final point…

Now this may sound a little out of character for a cheapskate like me, but listen up. I spent months, even years drifting from one email address to the next, hiding out only to be found again. Thanks to SpamCop, my record is clean (or at least my InBox). Even though SpamCop’s reporting is free, it is definitly worth a donation. So when you breathe your big sigh of relief on finding “no new messages”, consider tipping your hat to the Spam Cops.

-Brian

Spring Cleaning

We know life tends toward chaos, and so does your Mac. Reign in the disorder with these free downloads.

mu Spring CleaningEole

As creative as its name, Eole gives you a one-step cleanup that will sweep documents away to your Home directories (Music, Movies) based on their file type.

mu Spring Cleaningmaintain1

Keep your Mac’s inner-workings in top shape with this AppleScript Studio app. From maintain1 you can run all kinds of maintenance tasks built in to OS X’s UNIX roots.

mu Spring CleaningMySQL BackUp

Use a MySQL database on your Mac or a remote server? This handy little piece of freeware makes it easy to download and backup your MySQL databases using the mysqldump command.

mu Spring CleaningAccounts Enhancer

Wish there was an easier way of changing “short” user names? Accounts Enhancer makes this easy for Panther owners.

mu Spring CleaningMailDeliveryTool

Clean up your outgoing mail with this free tool. MDT keeps your “from” email addresses straight, so you can be sure to email associates from your work address and friends from your personal one.

Now its your turn to get that hard drive in order. Happy cleaning!

Brian

mu Spring CleaningDownloads provided by MacUpdate

Crystal Ball 2006

It has been a great year for freeware, as we’ll see when my annual Freeloader Friday Best of 2005 comes out later this month. But this week, I thought I’d peak over the fence at some early-development freeware that is likely to make it big in 2006.

Now, the disclaimer. This week’s picks are not beta – not even alpha software. So be prepared for some unpredictability. That said, they work fine for me.

Flock Developer Release

Firefox has reignited the browser wars, and given new life to the browser. An enterprising bunch of developers are building off the stable and fast core of Firefox, creating a browser for the future. They call it a “social browser”. Others are calling it the perfect browsing companion to the latest web services.

flock Crystal Ball 2006

Flock is a Firefox base, with integrated services. With Flock, you can manage your Flickr account and post directly to your blog without loading a page. In place of bookmarks, your Flock Favorites are synced to your del.icio.us favorites. And this is just the Developer’s Preview. Because it is based on Firefox (1.5 to be specific) it supports – with a little tweaking – Firefox extensions.

There are lists (here and here) of Flock-compatible extensions, and a free utility that can convert many Firefox extensions here. I think we’ll be hearing a lot about this project in the coming months.

bbPress

bbPress is a classic example of Open Source itch-scratching. When the folks at WorkPress needed a new forum system, they didn’t like the existing options so they came up with their own system. You can see it in use in the WordPress support forums. Now the project has gained a life of its own, and has been released as Open Source.

bbpress Crystal Ball 2006

Available only as nightly builds (not even a 0.1 version yet) the project is functional and as customizable and cutting edge as WordPress itself. It is light and fast, supporting user management (including banning), search and multiple forums. Even better it features a unique tag-cloud for quick navigation to topics by tag (for an example, see the WordPress support forums). bbPress is the only modern forum alternative I’ve seen. And yes, it even uses AJAX to update content.

Note: bbPress, like its cousin WordPress requires PHP and MySQL. My host: 1and1 has PHP/MySQL hosting starting at $2.99/month.

That’s it for our look into the future. I hope you liked what you saw. While release dates and features are still blurry, one thing is clear: things are changing on the web, and so is free software.

Brian