year

Jingle Bells and Whistles for your Mac

Has your Mac been good this year? Then reward it with some new software. I have collected a stockings-worth of handy freeware that should make your Internet time more effective.

Searchling 1.1b

There are good ideas, and then there are great ones. This little menu bar application lets you initiate searches to Google, Ebay, MacUpdate and more right from your menu. If you’re brave enough to dig into the code, you can add any site you like.

LifTP

This frequently updated FTP client is still in early development. Its “iApp” style brushed metal interface is appealing, as are its options. Quite a handy FTP client, it gets the job done nicely. Best of all, itís free and Fetch isnít.

TNEFís Enough

Ever received an email with a mysterious winmail.dat attachment? These encoded attachments are the product of Mac-loathing Outlook clients. TNEFís Enough is a small application that extracts anything meaningful from the winmail.dat file. Very useful if you receive frequent email from Win-Dosers. This one comes in Carbon, FAT and 68k flavors.

Join me for next weeks best of 2002 freeware. Email me and nominate your favorites.

Year Of the Mac– 2003

By: Jon Gales

This is the first annual Year of the Mac article. It covers what will happen
to the MAc during the next year.

2002 was a great year for the Mac. The new iMac’s were a smashing success, Jaguar
was and still is hot, the Switch ads are working to bring people in and are
working to change our image. A few years ago I got teased every time I said
I used a Mac. Now, people ask if it’s one of those cool ones on TV. Or if I
can make DVD’s. Now it’s actually cool to have a Mac (from the perspective of
an average PC user). I know several people who converted this year, and are
loving it.2003 is going to be a huge year for the Mac. Here’s what I think will
happen:

1) The Switch campaign will last through 2003. I bet there will be a few more
celebrity ads but a lot more good ol’ normal people ads.

2) The iPod will own the music player industry. Now that there is a Windows
version, nothing is stopping it. Look for more imitations but no one will settle
for anything but the iPod. I have a feeling this will pad Apple’s financial’s
for at least 2 quarters.

3) OS X will make big strides. Believe it or not but there are a lot of people
still using OS 9. They will switch over due to software makers switching over.
It’s going to be another hot year for OS X books and training software.

4) We’re going to see another iApp in 2003. Don’t know what yet, but the digital
hub is not yet complete. Of course iChat, iCal, and iSync will receive much
needed updates.

5) MacOS X 10.3 (code named Panther) will tempt even more IT professionals who
want to be able to run their favorite Unix goodies and still be able to run
Office and other programs from the GUI side of computing. OS X is already making
many a geek converts, but 10.3 will convert them in droves. Apple needs to market
OS X more towards geeks, some of who think it’s a kids OS because of the simplistic
nature. I’d like to see a commercial on Tech
TV
covering Terminal.app, and some of the nifty Utilities that ship with
X.

6) Apple’s flat panels will dip in price quite a bit. The big end of the year
rebates were a test. I’d expect to see the 17" down to the 600-700 range
and the Cinema displays follow suit proportionately. In a perfect world I’d
like to see Apple monitors be able to work with PC’s, but that’s not going to
happen. If Steve Jobs was more of a business man than a revolutionary we’d see
a lot more Apple Displays around.

7) Cocoa software is starting to mature and will only get better in 03. Programmers
are getting more advanced every day and some of the new software coming out
is just amazing. Photo To Movie for instance is revolutionary (and so freaking
cheap). Other examples of great Cocoa software are: NetNewsWire,
iPulse,
Chimera,
Adium and LaunchBar.
A lot of the great programming is coming from free or shareware programmers.
The big apps from Adobe and
Macromedia won’t be
written in Cocoa for a long time, but until then the small guys are more than
enough to keep us happy. Expect a huge year for cheap or free Cocoa software.
Don’t forget to be generous to the programmers… If they have a tip jar don’t
hold back. Brian’s Freeloader
Friday
column will keep you abreast of what’s new.

8) Apple stock will be above $20 a share at this time next year.Not great, but
it will be up for the year.

That’s it. This looks to be one hell of a year for the Macintosh!

Gifts I gave, Gifts I got

(republished from The
Inner-workings of the Merc Mind
)

This Christmas I found a few choice items under the tree while also putting
a few there for others to enjoy. Here are a few I can recommend for those of
you looking to spend your returned gift money or the cash Aunt Martha gave you
this year.

ipodskin Gifts I gave, Gifts I got

iPod
Skin from Speck Products
I am usually a big fan of iSkin
products
, but for rubberized iPod sheaths my nod goes to the iPod
Skin from Speck Products. It’s not as sticky as the iSkin so it goes in
your pocket with less of a fight and the flip out bottom on the 3G model
allows for access to the docking port without stretching or disfiguring
the Skin. The cut-out on the top of the sheath also allows you to add
an iTrip with very little modification to the iPod Skin.

+: Protects the slick iPod surface from scratches. Isn’t as sticky
feeling as the iSkin
Exo
and offers easier access to the docking port.
-: Also hides the slick iPod surface from view. Does not include
a screen protector or belt clip like the iSkin
Exo

itrip Gifts I gave, Gifts I got

Griffin
iTrip FM Transmitter for iPod
Anything that makes the world a
little more cordless is a good thing. 2 or more cables left beside each
other without supervision will eventually braidóit’s a fact. It is also
a fact that, in many parts of the world, it is illegal or al least dangerous
to drive while listening to music on headphones, so being able to transmit
your iPod music over an FM signal to your car radio is terrific. The good
news and bad news is that the transmitter isn’t that powerful: bad because
you need to find just the right place to put your iPod while it transmits
but good because, most likely, the guy waiting for the light to turn green
in the lane beside you won’t be listening to your tunes on his radio.

+: Wirelessness rocks! FM signal not strong enough to be stolen
by cars in the next lane.
-: FM signal sometimes not strong enough to be used by the car carrying
the iTrip.

iskinpb Gifts I gave, Gifts I got

iSkin
ProTouch PB
Finally, the people at iSkin have released a keyboard
protector for the PowerBook layout. What? You thought the “PB” stood for
“peanut butter”? Well, it might. Since the ProTouch keyboard protector
will stand between your keyboard and your sticky, greasy “PB&J” fingers
and protecting the fragile keys from subatomic
toasticles
. I bought this for my
roommate, CJ.

+: I love these things! No more crumbs and hairs in my keyboard.
-: The texture takes some getting used to.

The
Official eBay Bible by Jim Griff Griffith
(not exactly inkeeping
with WDW’s mobile theme)
I had already bought a copy of this book
for myself to find out how I might scuttle the parts of my now defunct
iBook
on the World’s Online Marketplace. But as I read through it, I kept
thinking to myself, “George needs to read this.” George
is a SCUBA diver
and likes to collect bottles that he find on his
dives. He’s always wondered what it would take to sell a few of these
items or at the very least find out what they’d go for. This book goes
into all of that and more. If you’re an eBay addict or are thinking of
cultivating an addiction, this book will have you freebasing Beanie
Babies
in no time.

+: Tips for buying, tips for selling. Tips on everything from
setting up your eBay account to leaving feedback.
-: PC-centric informationónothing to worry about though.

Gotta go, I think the folks at the Future Shop just figured out that someone
is scamming their wifi signal.

Happy New Year!?

-Rick