Thanksgiving

Rick shares his picks for Thanksgiving iPad apps


0 Rick shares his picks for Thanksgiving iPad apps

In Canada, due to our earlier harvest, we celebrate Thanksgiving in October. So, just as soon as we’ve stopped remarking, “Can you believe the summer is over already?” we start into marveling at the fact that it’s time to think turkey and stuffing.

In this visit to Urban Rush, I demonstrate five iPad apps that will help you get into the Thanksgiving spirit (does every holiday have a spirit?). I’ve got something to help you work your gratitude muscle, another to help you find the perfect Thanksgiving side dish, an app to help you pair the meal with the right wine, one to help you make sure you don’t burn the turkey and finally one to keep you from getting sick eating leftovers that are way past their prime.

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The Freeware in Rick’s iBook

As Brian celebrates Thanksgiving with his family, the job of bringing you all
your weekly dose of free software tips falls on me. I agreed to this job without
first asking myself, “Do you know what you’re doing?” If I had asked
that question I would have realized that the answer was “No.” So rather
than totally cop out, I’m going to offer you a list of the freeware I carry
with me in my iBook as I go about my day.

Adium
I can’t believe we have never covered this program here yet! This is the
AOL IM client for Mac OS X — customization up the wazoo. If you are familiar
with America Online’s Instant Messager, then you pretty much know the basics
of Adium: set up your account, set up a buddy list, go online and chat away.
The difference with using Adium is it has none of the unwanted banners, news
tickers and stock information that comes with AOL IM and it has not of the cutsie
buddy pictures and candy coated dialog balloons that come with iChat. And, if
you so desire, all your chats and your buddy list can all be held in one tabbed
window. Clean and neat.

There seems to be an additional
version of Adium
floating around at a different location so I’ll include
that too.

adium The Freeware in Ricks iBook

MacStumbler
This is the Mac equivalent of NetStumbler. It allows an 802.11b (aka: Wi-Fi,
aka: Airport) enabled Mac to scan for signals in the area. It shows SSID, MAC
address, channel, signal strength, the vendor of the access point and whether
WEP has been enabled. If you’ve got a Wi-Fi card in your portable Mac, load
this utility, hop in the car and see how many wireless access points you can
find in your neighborhood. It even announces newly discovered servers using
the Mac’s speech synthesizer so you can keep you eyes on the road while you’re
wardriving.

backlightstumbler The Freeware in Ricks iBook

BackLight
Okay this one is not all that productive…in fact, it’s counterproductive.
What Backlight does is displays whatever Screen Effect you specify as your Desktop
picture — LIVE. As you might imagine this dominates your processor quite
a bit and, even at the lowest priority setting, will render most Macs pretty
useless for anything other than watching BackLight.

That’s it for this week. Brian will be back with more free Mac software next
week. If you have any suggestions for freeware we should feature here that we
haven’t covered already, send
Brian a message about it.

Freeloader on Vacation– Nominate Best Freeware of 2005

Like many of you, I’m taking some time off to enjoy Thanksgiving, so there’ll be no Freeloader Friday this week.

However, I do have some homework for you. My annual Best of feature is coming up, so send nominations of your favorite freeware to brian AT macmerc DOT com.

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