December 2006 Archives

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

I have been deluged by e-mail about disappearing iPods. Here’s what happens in general: Your iPod starts reporting disc (although I’d imagine that “disk” is more correct) errors in iTunes when you try to sync. “The iPod cannot be updated. The required disc cannot be found.” So you reformat your iPod and reload the new firmware. Then your iPod stops appearing in iTunes. It mounts onto the desktop as a disk rather than with an iPod icon. Unfortunately, this isn’t just happening to you. It’s mostly shuffles, but also happened to nanos and 5G video iPods. Anyway, the cure for now seems to be quitting out of and re-launching iTunes and hoping. And occasionally rebooting your computer. Some people have found that it helps to keep their computer from sleeping and enabling disk usage for the iPod. In any case, it’s not just you and it seem to happen to iPods using the latest firmware updates. If you know anything more about this behavior or have any insights, drop me an e-mail or add to the comments. Thanks.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

New Years is just a few days away, so I thought I’d take a little time to learn more about Apple Time. Your Mac always knows what time it is because it uses one of Apple’s custom NTP servers. NTP, which stands for Network Time Protocol, provides a way for clocks to synchronize even when faced with variable latency data networks. It was developed back in the 1980’s at the University of Delaware.

In System Preferences’ Date & Time settings, you can selet one of three Apple NTP servers: time.apple.com, time.asia.apple.com, or time.euro.apple.com. Select the one that bests describes your geographic location. Your computer will contact the server on a regular basis to resynchronize your system.

The polling frequency of your clock is set in /private/etc/ntp.conf, where it typically checks for accuracy about every hour. The ntp.conf file, which is used by the NTP daemon (ntpd, ps -ax | grep ntpd), sets a minimum polling and a maximum polling interval. These represent seconds to the power of two. So the (Apple) standard minimum polling interval of 12 is 4096 seconds, or about 68 minutes. The maximum polling interval of 17 is more like a day and a half.

Sometimes despite everything, you may lose sync to network time. Apple has a support how-to posted that walks you through updating your ntp.conf file to deal with this.

Finally, I stumbled across this interesting NTP hack, which allows users without system administrator privileges to access a second time server. Nifty.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Friday has rolled around once again, and this week many of you have new digital music players to enjoy. Load ‘em on up with this fresh heap of Napster freebies.

“Make Love” by Jess Klein
Even with six albums under her belt, Jess Klein’s latest is her most revelatory. City Garden, which features today’s free download, is an emotional work which Klein hopes will “release and heal.” Download this track and get soothed. [Dec 29]

“Ella y Yo” by Aventura
Known for their excellent musicianship, look for these Dominican sensations to enjoy a long and prosperous career. This reggaeton offering features one of the genre’s heavy hitters, Don Omar. [Dec 28]

“Can’t Stop” by Ozomatli
This Los Angeles collective’s infectious mix of salsa, hip hop and jazz-funk has earned them a Grammy and countless fans. Download this track and be among the first to get an early taste of Ozo’s highly anticipated new album, Don’t Mess with the Dragon, currently set for release in March. [Dec 27]

“Two Ton Paperweight (EXPLICIT)” by Psychostick
Originally from Odessa, Texas, this band has undergone many transformations on their way to becoming what you hear today. Almost everyone can relate to this hardcore ode to a less-than-dependable hunk of metal (also known as a car) from Psychostick’s debut album, We Couldn’t Think of a Title. [Dec 26]

“Greensleeves (Alternate Take 6)” by Vince Guaraldi Trio
Merry Christmas from the man behind the music for the beloved Peanuts TV specials. This alternate take from the Charlie Brown Christmas sessions (done as a bossa nova rather than the jazz waltz version used in the show) is from the newly expanded and remastered soundtrack. [Dec 25]

“Jingle Bells” by Lisa Loeb
Pop star Lisa Loeb remembers that Christmas is really for the kids and offers this “gift,” as featured on Kid’s Club–Holiday Fun Volume 1, a diverse collection of children’s holiday favorites. [Dec 24]

“Mais” by Pierre Aderne
Originally released in Brazil in 2005, the third album from this former competitive swimmer has made its way around the world and has become a Top 10 album in Japan. This track features one of Aderne’s diverse Brazilian musical styles. [Dec 23]

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Here’s a summary of last week’s Mac Freeware & Free & Open Source Software (F/FOSS) from my personal blog. If you have freeware or Open Source software to recommend for Mac users, please post it in a response here (or email the information to me if you prefer to remain anonymous).

KeePass: Password Safe
Here’s an Open Source application this is even more multi-platform than usual.

KeePass:: The Open Source Password Safe

The original version was written for for use with Microsoft Windows. However, its author lists unofficial ports for Linux/Mac OS X (X11 required for the Mac), Palm OS, Pocket PC (Windows Mobile), and even the USB flash memory U3 portable smart technology format.

The application’s official description reads: KeePass is a free/open-source password manager or safe which helps you to manage your passwords in a secure way.

TextWrangler 2: Mac Text Editor
If you ever want to waste a lot of time, bring up the topic of favorite text editors in a group of software developers.

Even though I have a couple of favorite text editors, I’m always looking at other editors just in case they do something better than the ones I’m using.

Here’s a freeware text editor for the Mac that might be interesting if you are one of those people who keep looking at other text editors too.

Bare Bones Software TextWrangler 2

I don’t see Ruby in the list of programming language syntaxes supported for highlighting and function navigation.

VLC Media Player
When I bought my Mac mini I had a couple of video files I had created under Microsoft Windows that did not play on the Mac. More recently, when I wiped Windows XP Home Edition off of my PC and installed Windows XP Media Center Edition in its place, I found that I couldn’t play commercial DVDs on the system because Media Center did not include the necessary CODECs.

In both cases, I turned to the Open Source…

VLC Media Player

…to quickly get running (I have yet to bother to look for CODECs for Windows Media Center Edition) to play my videos.

Yahoo! Bookmarks Beta
Until recently Yahoo!’s MyWeb and Bookmarks were separate web features. Yahoo merged MyWeb into Bookmarks recently (I’m guessing within the last two months or so). All my MyWeb site links and descriptions were moved over to…

Yahoo! Bookmarks Beta

This merged beta looks better than MyWeb did IMHO. I like the thumbnail image of each bookmarked page. And, the new color scheme is a lot easier on my eyes. The one thing I miss though is an RSS feed of my bookmarks.

It looks like Yahoo! is trying to move its Bookmarks (formerly MyWeb) away from a social networking tool to simply a personal bookmarking tool and keeping del.icio.us as its social network bookmarking site.

Gigavox Levelator Upgraded to Version 1.1.0
Gigavox has an upgrade for their popular audio leveling freeware tool…

Levelator 1.1.0

Versions are available for Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. There’s a note on the site that says Linux coming soon.

The java-based tool is aimed about podcasters/netcasters who have two or more people on a podcast. The two helps to adjust the audio levels for multiple speakers.

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

061228-GeniusBar.jpg
I had an interesting (ok, that may not be the right word) opportunity to compare Apple and Dell support handling recently. The results may surprise you (I know I was surprised). My Dell Lattitude D600 notebook (about 2.5 years old at the time) had a sudden hard drive failure about 2 months ago. Last night, my 8 month old MacBook hard drive died just as suddenly. But, let’s see what happened after that.

Phone call delay: Both Apple and Dell kept me on hold for between 5 to 10 minutes. Not too bad.
Tech Rep: Both tech reps were male and based in the US. Ok, still similar.
Tech Rep Cordialness: Have any of you run into reps that are reading from some bad decision tree script? Fortunately, neither the Apple nor the Dell reps were among this group. Both let me tell them what diagnostics I had already performed and skipped the useless questions in the decision tree.

This is where the similarity ends.

Dell: The tech rep agreed with my assessment that the drive was dead and I had a new hard drive in 48 hours. They provided a label and box for me to ship my dead drive back in. I was up and running before heading home on Friday.
Apple: The Apple tech rep said the drive was probably dead but would not ship a drive to me. Instead, he insisted I go to the Genius Bar at a local Apple Store. Oh boy, I get to fight the crowds just a few days after Christmas. Just what I wanted to do after work (actually I had to leave the office early). He set up an appointment for me at 4:40pm.

Apple Store: The shopping center was packed. Fortunately, I found parking at the top level of the parking structure. The Apple Store was even more packed with a line to the cashier about 12 deep. The Genius Bar had just one iPod Genius and one Mac Genius. The appointment list displayed above them was packed. The harried Mac Genius had three dead or dying Mac notebooks of various types in front of him with a couple of small Firewire external drives. One guy came in after his appointed time and pushed the already delayed Genius’ schedule back even further. This fellow had a dying hard drive in his 5 year old PowerBook and a flight to Australia 6am Saturday morning. He ended up pairing up with a sales person and buying a new MacBook (good decision IMHO). The Mac Genius agreed that my hard drive was dead. Unfortunately, the Apple Store didn’t have any spare drives. So, I’m faced with a 7 to 10 day wait now.

I asked the Mac Genius if he could have Apple just ship me a drive directly and let me replace the drive (as I did with the Dell notebook). Unfortunately, there is a complete disconnect between the Apple Store Genius Bar and Apple Care. So, no, he could not help with do that.

I must commend Mac Genius Jason at the Ala Moana Apple Store, btw. He was a picture of patience and diagnostic efficiency in the face (literally) of a bunch of annoyed/depressed/anxious customers with Macs in various states of distress. The iPod Genius to my right was a similar picture with the distressed iPod owners he faced. Kudos to those Geniuses for really keeping their cool in a noisy environment with clearly distressed customers in front of them.

I left my MacBook at the Apple Store but am calling Apple Care when they re-open Friday morning to see if they can’t speed up this repair process. Surely, Apple’s fabled customer service should at least be able to match Dell’s? And, no I don’t have Pro Care, just the 3 year Apple Care extension. But, I don’t have a special Dell support contract either, just their 3 year extension.

One more thing (to borrow Steve J.’s line): The Dell Latitude only requires a single screw to be removed to remove the hard drive. The MacBook requires removing the battery, unscrewing three screws, and removing a metal strip before you can remove the hard drive.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Have your temporary Webkit files disappeared from your /tmp folder? Perhaps you should be looking in your /var/tmp folder instead. Recently Firefox and Safari seem to store flash temporary items in a new location. Look in /var/tmp/folders.501/TemporaryItems. (This assumes that your user id is 501, which is typical but not certain–type id at the command line.) Instead of being named “Webkitplugin”, the file will be called something like “TemporaryFlashItem”.

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Here’s part 2 of my round-of of the year’s Mac news and opinions here at the Mac Devcenter blog. If you missed Part 1, here it is.

Oliver Breidenbach

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Another astonishing thing happening in the Mac developer community. 100 developers signed up for MacSanta, offering 200 products.

This practically proves that there is a need for a Mac Marketplace.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Here’s this week’s edition of Napster Freebies. To sum up the feedback from the last few weeks, these links seem to work internationally and do not require a Napster account to use. If you find otherwise, let me know by email or add a comment below. I hope you enjoy the music and that you discover an artist or two this way.

“O Come, O Come Emmanuel” by Aaron Shust
This staff member and worship leader of the Perimeter Church in Atlanta paid his dues playing colleges and coffee houses, drawing on influences including Motown, Bob Marley, and U2. Hear the result in his take on this enduring carol. [Dec 22]

“Stalk U” by Los Abandoned
Los Abandoned unite the Casio keyboard with gritty electric guitars and bittersweet ukulele to form their post-punk/Latin-alternative sound. What does that sound like? Download this track and find out. [Dec 21]

“How Long” by Kenny White
Veteran songwriter/composer Kenny White has done everything from commercial jingles to working with the likes of Linda Ronstadt, Dwight Yoakam, and Gladys Knight. This track is from his latest album, Never Like This. [Dec 20]

“The Awful Things” by Simon Dawes
Malibu’s most wanted indie-rockers keep it loose, clanky, and cool on this fan favorite from their first full-length album, Carnivore. Enough chunky guitars, melodic hooks, and hand-claps to satisfy the most jaded power-pop aficionado. [Dec 19]

“Grim Reaper Blues” by Entrance
On his fourth Entrance album, Guy Blakeslee realizes a fully amplified electric orchestra to channel his free-flowing spiritual theater, equally inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Timothy Leary, and Delta-Blues legend Charley Patton. [Dec 18]

“When We Were Young” by Life of Riley
Houston-based alt-rock brothers Cassidy and Brice Campbell made a name for themselves producing hits for Christian groups including Inhabited and Modern Day John. This wistful rocker is the first single is from their new band’s debut album, Days Aw [Dec 17]

“Posters” by Jeffrey & Jack Lewis
Already known as an underground comic book artist and for his association with the Moldy Peaches, Jeffrey Lewis has just released his third album, recorded with his bass-playing younger brother, Jack. Is that a snippet of Gilligan’s Island melody we detect at the top? [Dec 16]

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Here’s a summary of last week’s Mac Freeware & Free & Open Source Software (F/FOSS) from my personal blog. If you have freeware or Open Source software to recommend for Mac users, please post it in a response here (or email the information to me if you prefer to remain anonymous).

Freeciv (Clone of Sid Meier’s Civilization for multiple OSes)
I mentioned in an earlier post that I was once addicted to games like Sid Meier’s Civilization.

Open Source supporters may find it interesting to know that there is a clone of it that runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.

Freeciv 2.0.8 (released March 6, 2006)

GIMP and Gimpshop
The GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP) is a powerful bitmap image manipulation application that is available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows through the magic of the Open Source community.

GIMP - The GNU Image Manipulation Program

But, despite its power, what if its multiple disconnected windows interface throws you for GUI loop? It does take a while to get comfortable with that interface and you might now want to have the time. No problem. Head over to take a look at…

Plastic Bugs Gimpshop

Adium Multi-IM Protocol Client for Mac OS X
I’m not much of a IM user, but if you are and you use a Mac, I’m told that…

Adium

…is the free Open Source IM client to try out. It documentation says that you can use it to IM users of AIM, Jabber, MSN (now Live) Messenger, Yahoo! Messenger, and more.

It has been available as a Universal Binary since version 0.88 (current version is 0.89.1).

Flip4Mac: Play Windows Media Files on your Mac
The Mac is known for its multimedia capabilities. But, one of the things I noticed when I got my first Mac (a Mac mini) back in 2005 was that it couldn’t play the Windows Media audio and video files commonly used by many sites like NPR (National Public Radio). Microsoft had not pulled support for its Mac version of Windows Media Player yet. So, all was not lost. But, Microsoft soon after pulled that version out of production. Shortly after it licensed…

Flip4Mac

…to let Windows Media files play in QuickTime. I’m using it on an Intel-based MacBook (1st generation with a mere Core Duo :-).

Matthew Russell

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

A new version of iTerm is out today that brings some very noticeable speed and font rendering improvements. If you tried iTerm before and didn’t like it because it felt slow and the display appeared ever-so-slightly fuzzy, get this update and see that things are looking a lot better. It now looks and feels just as fast as Terminal…plus it has tabs and other niceties that Terminal doesn’t.

Try it and feel the improvement.

And while we’re on this topic, does anyone have any intel on Leopard packing a new Terminal?

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Was 2006 a good year for Apple? Yeah, I’d say so. If only for the incredible speed and smoothness of the transition to Intel, not forgetting all the new iPods, Core 2 Duo processors, and hints of what’s to come (in the form of the iTV and Leopard sneak peaks).

How have we covered things here at the Mac DevCenter blog? In an informative and entertaining way, we hope. Here’s an overview of the news from the first half of the year; I’ll post the second half tomorrow.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

PreFab Software just released the 2.0 update to their UI Browser software. For those of you unfamiliar with this product, it allows you to select any on-screen element and determine how to address it via AppleScript and System Events. This can save you a huge amount of effort when you attempt to script Applications without (or with inadequate) AppleScript dictionaries. The 2.0 update is now a universal binary with enhanced functionality to make the scripting process easier. You can read about the specific updates here.

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Parallels released Parallels Desktop for Mac Beta-2. This beta update addresses what I’m guessing is one of the most asked for features: USB 2.0 support (vs. the slower USB 1.1). The USB 2.0 support is not complete yet as Parallels admits in their press release: Work with critical USB 2.0 devices like external hard drive, printers, and scanners at full native speeds. Just plug and play! A heads up; “isynchronous” devices like Bluetooth devices, webcams, etc. do not work with USB 2.0 yet, but we’re working hard to get them up and running.

Parallels Transporter lets you migrate a VMware Workstation or Microsoft Virtual PC image to Parallels. Add all this to the Coherence mode made available in the first beta and enhanced in this one and you have to wonder how VMware’s Fusion for the Mac will fare when they release their first public beta (presumably in a few weeks during Macworld).

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

PSCS3Arith.jpg

So, is the PS CS3 icon a placeholder or not? My guess was that it was a placeholder. I was wrong. Scott McNulty of TUAW found out otherwise via John Nack’s blog. Veerle Pieters’ weblog has a full description of the two-letter mnemonic development along with interview questions about the choice with Adobe designer Ryan Hicks.

The debate that has risen up around iconography and the merits of what we’ve done taken in a broader context is impressive. The new direction is a bigger change than I think anyone in the public would have expected from us, change on that scale is going to be hard and of course there are those who will rise up and scream heresy. Honestly, we have been living with the icon system internally on our own machines for so long now that it’s a bit hard to remember what the big deal is. We’re as varied and hardcore a user group as will be found anywhere, we’ve found the stuff just works. Done.

adobeicons.jpg

Love ‘em? Hate ‘em? Me? I hate ‘em.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Off all the CS3 updates, it’s the “workspace dock” that makes me most uncomfortable. I’m not sure whether or not I (a) like this change, (b) can live with this change, and (c) can use the changed interface effectively. I know the Adobe engineers were busy at work trying to get all the things we do a lot of into a central location, but the new workspace dock is cluttered and more than a little hard to use. Yes, all our normal friends (”info”, “layers”, “history”, etc) are there, but they’re in new forms or new locations or get accessed in new ways.

WorkspaceLooks.jpg

The workspace has several presentations. You can collapse or expand either side of the dock by clicking the double-arrows at the top. When collapsed, the icons on the left side gives single-click access to your history, brushes, tool presets, and several other utilities. I can’t really imagine a time you’d want to collapse the right-hand side. To access any of the palettes, just click the tab with the name (as you are used to doing) or, when the tab is closed, use the Window menu to reopen it. I’m guessing there’s supposed to be an easier way to add palettes, but I couldn’t find one yet.

I’m more than a little disappointed that I can’t just drag stuff around the screen the way I used to (like putting the Info panel here and the layers panel there). Everything is docked to the dock, which I’ll grow used to, but which kind of ticks me off. Oh well, can’t have everything.

Chris Adamson

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

A lot of people are talking about Security Update 2006-008, linking to an old blog of mine and basically misrepresenting the situation.
Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

O’Reilly received questions about Parallels Desktop for Mac from reader M.D. and sent it on to me. M.D. asks:

I see the PDF you have for sale.

1. What does it add to the Parallel manual?
2. Is there a “missing manual” or idiot’s dummy guide for parallel?

M.D.: My O’Reilly Short Cuts PDF Windows for Intel Macs focuses on giving Mac users tips on using Microsoft Windows XP on a Mac. The value-add for Parallels users running Windows as a Guest OS lies in two main areas. First, it provides basic Windows configuation and security information. Second, it provides Parallels specific tips where appropriate. For example, the fact that Safe Mode boot does not work and a reminder to make simple backups of the virtual hard disk file to remove the need for Safe Boot. I’ve attached the Table of Contents for the PDF at the end of this blog entry.

I also answer questions about virtualization now and then in one of my personal blogs. You can click on the virtualization category in its left sidebar to find virtualization specific items. I plan on posting more items specifically about running Windows Vista in Parallels over the next few months.

You should also take a look at Parallel’s Official Blog maintained by the main PR guy Ben Rudolph (who is way more techie that the typical tech company PR person IMHO).

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Looks like I’m not the only one who was wowed by Parallels Desktop for Mac in 2006. Macworld’s readers gave it the nod for the favorite Mac software for 2006.

Readers’ Choice Awards: Parallels Desktop and 24-inch iMac

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Jeremiah Foster has already posted that ZFS, the open-source 128-bit file system, is coming to Leopard. I just wanted to add that where ZFS totally rules is in handling multiple disks, creating virtual storage pools that span more than one physical device.

Other cool stuff includes “snapshots” that retain access to unchanged data for updated files and which create read-only restore points, “copy-on-write” that keeps the file system from overwriting live data, and dynamic striping, which boosts system throughput while distributing the write-load across storage devices. And that’s not even mentioning OS-integrated check summing for data integrity.

I’m not sure that ZFS will entirely replace HFS+ any time soon, but it’s nice to see that Apple is moving in the right direction. I haven’t had a huge amount of exposure to ZFS, so if any of you Sun Microsystems-type folk want to chime in, please let us know your thoughts about the file system.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

One of the biggest changes I’ve encountered so far in CS3 involves the Curves tool. Curves, which allows you to control pixel-by-pixel brightness levels by editing an interactive brightness look-up table, been fully redesigned and updated.

Remember the old Curves dialog? It looked like this. Many things have not changed. You still have the eyedroppers, the pencil/path options, the Auto levels and so forth. Also, Curves is still accessible by pressing Command-M or selecting the Image->Adjustments submenu.

OldCurves.jpg

The new Curves dialog is larger, cleaner (at least in my opinion) and has a few lovely new features as standard elements. I love seeing the pixel-brightness histogram built right into the display as a default feature. It’s also nice to be able to simultaneously edit each of the channels and the standard input/output number display is also appreciated.

NewCurvesOptions.jpg

I’m not sure whether the Presets are a new feature or not, but I’m really enjoying using them. They offer a nice place to start Curves-wise for certain classes of images.

NewCurvesPresets.jpg

Jeremiah Foster

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

According to World of Mac the ZFS (Zettabyte File System) will be implemented in the upcoming Mac OS X release. This is pretty amazing news I think. According to Sun, who developed ZFS, the file system “is a fundamentally new approach to data management. We’ve blown away 20 years of obsolete assumptions, eliminated complexity at the source, and created a storage system that’s actually a pleasure to use.”

It has been suggested that the ZFS file system is being called Time Machine, which looks pretty good to me.

Yes, there is a touch of marketing speak there, from both Sun and Apple, but if it delivers on half of its promises, it will be a significant improvement on what we have today. Kudos Sun and Apple!

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

I’ve finally had a chance to play around with Photoshop CS3. In fact, I’ve now made it my default image editor so I’ve been doing actual work with the software. Although there’s some new functionality, it’s really the changes in look and layout that grabs your attention. Here are just three of the changes that I’ve noticed, as a first taste of what’s new.

The software “phases” in. When you make Photoshop active, the software uses some sort of alpha-transparency mode to overlay the rest of your desktop. This creates an odd feel to the program that sets it apart from the rest of my software. I’m not sure if this is going to be a standard presentation for other applications in upcoming OS updates, but it certainly stands out.

LayoutContrast.jpg

The default toolbox layout has changed. Instead of the standard 2-by-whatever layout that we know and love, the default toolbox is 1-by-much-longer. It looks better. And it takes up way less horizontal space. I was completely lost, however, in terms of finding the actual tools and quickly changed back to the standard 2-by presentation. To move between the two layouts, just click the double-arrow over the stand-in Photoshop icon.

You get task-sensitive cheat sheets (as well as a way to save your workspace layouts). I’m not sure whether this feature is going to stay in the production CS3 or not, but the Window -> Workspace menu lets you locate tagged menu items that affect particular tasks. Tasks include “Image Analysis”, “Web Design”, “Color and Tonal Correction” and more. From a reviewer point of view, I particularly liked Window -> Workspace -> What’s New in CS3. Select this and then click Yes to apply the workspace. Open your menus and you’ll find various items highlighted in pastel colors. (Here they’re blue, but for other tasks they are violet, or pink, etc.) To return to the normal menus, choose Window -> Workspace -> Default Workspace.

Newcontraststuff.jpg

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The new WriteRoom 2.0 beta from Hog Bay Software has a bunch of new features, one of which is the addition of an “Edit in WriteRoom” command for most Cocoa-based applications.

Installed just by clicking a button in the WriteRoom 2.0 prefs, the command becomes available in any Cocoa app that also uses the NSTextView class to display text. That includes Safari.

That means that any form field in Safari can be edited, in glorious full-screen simplicity, using WriteRoom. Nice for posting to weblogs, but also pretty nice for composing and replying to messages in Gmail. Hit Control + Command + O to open the field in WriteRoom, compose away, and when you return to Safari your text will be there, ready to send.

What you end up with is a hybrid email client that uses your browser just for the browsing bit - for listing and finding messages - and WriteRoom for the editing bit. It’s nice.

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Since January of this long, very long year, Microsoft has been the target of all laughs and criticism. Vista is late, the Zune is a disaster, the company does not innovate… The list of all they do not do, in the eyes of the public, seems to grow daily. Yet, we seem to have forgotten to ask ourselves what we, in the Mac world, have done.

Bruce Stewart

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

In the latest innovative move by Mac software developers to pool their resources and help promote their products, the MacSanta holiday discount campaign has been launched. By simply using the discount code “MACSANTA” before December 25 on a variety of different Mac software sites, customers can save 20% off the list price on some of the most popular and respected Mac applications.

It may not quite be the Mac Shareware Store that Oliver Breidenbach is calling for, but with participants like BareBones Software (BBEdit) and Rogue Amoeba (Audio Hijack Pro), you can definitely get some deals on some great Mac software. If you want to see a list of the companies participating, join the campaign with your own products, or read a silly Mac holiday poem,
visit the MacSanta site.

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

A few weeks ago, I asked the rest of the Mac Devcenter contributors to their favorite new app of 2006. Nominations had to have been released - or reached 1.0, or some other similar milestone - within the last 12 months.

So here are our favorite new apps from the last year. What’s yours?

Oliver Breidenbach

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Congratulations to Phillip Ryu and John Casasanta for the runaway success of MacHeist. In just seven days, they sold more than 16,000 of their shareware app bundles with a gross revenue of almost $750,000 (estimate based on published $185,000 donated to charity representing 25% of the revenue). It surely exceeded everyone’s expectations and probably Phillip’s and John’s wildest dreams.

It is frankly astonishing to learn that Mac users are prepared to spend this kind of money on shareware apps if they are presented in an interesting way. It also shows that Mac shareware app developers could make a lot more money if they would band together. After all, this is about $75,000 per app in a single week and I am sure that not very many (if any at all) of the participating developers ever sold as much in a single week. In addition to that it seems that the regular revenue at least for us was not less than usual. So this really is on top. Those $75,000 would be a nice boost to our yearly revenue.

So what do we learn from it?

  • Bundles of say 5 to 10 apps priced at slightly more than the most expensive app (a slight adjustment I would make to the current setup) are really appealing to customers and make it much more likely that they actually buy the product, even if they only imagine a marginal usefullness of the other apps in the bundle.
  • Getting exposure is much easier for the bundle than for the individual app. If we can avoid building factions and get more developers to support this, the exposure could even be bigger.
  • Advertising for such bundles would also be much more cost effective.

There are also a couple of points to give thought about:

  • Although I got emails from many people claiming that they never bought “shareware” apps before and a very small number of the 18,000 people had previously been in our database, I think that MacHeist still did mostly reach the same kind of customers that we had before. Apple sells about 1.8 million Macs a quarter, so the 16,000 represent a bit less than 1% of the Mac sales of the Quarter. Or 0.2% of the year.
  • 16,000 customers in just 7 days require a lot of handling and not everything on our side went smoothly, mostly because we expected much less. In addition, the increasing spamfileritis creates many problems in actually delivering the licenses to the customers.

So, how to move on?

I think a Mac Shareware Store is called for. A place where customers find interesting bundles, that has an affiliate system to reward developers who drive traffic to the platform, a system where people earn mileage points towards future purchases, accepts all kinds of payments and puts gift-card-like displays into the Apple Retail Stores. Add to that a MacUpdate/Versiontracker/Mac Products Guide like functionality and the talent of a Phillip Ryu and John Casasanta for marketing. Something like the Windows Marketplace.*

The economics of a place like that would have to be a bit different than that of the MacHeist, but instead of a one off pot luck shot it would probably be a solid business with a good revenue stream. To make it fair, the company could sell stock to the developers who list their products. 40%-50% of revenue could go to the developers, 20%-30% into marketing and advertising, 20% into operations and 10% into profit for the owners.

In fact it should be much like iTunes. An app pre-installed on all 1.8 million Macs sold in a quarter, with an editorial content, built-in download system and copy protection. You know, I always wondered what the “Mac OS X Software…” menu entry in the Apple menu is about.

* Before you fire up your flamethrowers: Yes, it does not have Phillip or John working for it; Yes, Vista is a Mac OS X rippoff; I just mention it because it is a basically good idea and has many of the attributes I would like to see in a Mac Market Place. Apple,… do …something!

Matthew Russell

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The notMac Challenge is a recent effort that aims to create the incentive for developing a .Mac replacement in exchange for $10,000. From the official website:

Since Apple decided to start charging for dotMac, I’ve spent $495 to keep some useful files remotely accessible on my iDisk and sync my bookmarks, address book and calendar between computers. While I find these features incredibly useful and convenient, I have no need for any of dotMac’s web-based services, and as a result, I don’t think I’ve been getting a good value from Apple. I know that workarounds exist that allow one to take advantage of dotMac’s services without a dotMac account, but they require a level of technical proficiency that I just don’t have. I’ve no doubt there are a lot of people like me.

The goal of the notMac Challenge is to create the incentive for someone to make an alternative dotMac solution available for the general public. Since this is something that could benefit a large number of people in the Mac community, I figure what better way to create that incentive than to invite anyone interested to contribute to the reward.

To make the stakes even richer, I’ll match every contribution up to a total of $10,000. So, if you contribute $100, I’ll double it for a total of $200. Hopefully, in a short amount of time, the prize pool will be large enough to encourage someone out there to liberate the less technically literate of us from the obligation to pay Apple $99 a year.

Sounds neat, doesn’t it? It’ll be especially interesting to see what kinds of developers step up and how all of the administrivia works out assuming geographically separated developers who don’t know one another try to coordinate and manage the work to a schedule. Heck, just doing the “general contracting” for an effort like this could be quite time consuming if enough parties were involved. Still, $10,000 sounds pretty reasonable considering that much of this work could be pieced together with some existing high-quality applications and a relatively minor amount of custom scripting.

Of course, a fixed $10,000 prize doesn’t address the recurring cost of web hosting for thousands of potential users, so perhaps that figure is just for the initial development of an out-of-the-box notMac server?

In any event, I wish these folks the best of luck. It’s always exciting to root for the underdog.

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Remember Mac OS X’s first high-profile security vulnerability? A very long time ago, when most of the Mac community still thought of UNIX as a promised land of security, stability and compatibility, when Apples were still blue and glossy, when the Dock was still wearing its stripy baby costume, it was discovered Software Update could be lured into downloading rogue updates from a malicious server. Panic ensued, as well as an update, that Apple promptly and dutifully issued. The Mac world was hurt but not defeated. Yet, that very issue that prompted so much frantic updating persists in a great many applications to date. Somehow, nobody seems to care.

Bruce Stewart

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Last month, Andrew at MacWork.com wrote an intriguing post about one of his customer’s Powerbooks getting literally fried by a botched cable modem service call. After a rash of questions and doubtful comments he’s now posted all the grisly details, with photos, in MacInferno Part II: The full story of how the cable company incinerated my Powerbook.

IMG_2340.jpg

If you like seeing toasted hardware, it’s worth checking out. I’ve had my own experiences with inept cable technicians before, but this one definitely takes the cliche to a whole new level.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Since last week, more and more international readers have e-mailed me to let me know that they’ve been able to download tracks from the O’Reilly Friday Napster posts. Because of that, I’m just going to stop saying “US Only”, because clearly it isn’t. As always, if you enjoy these posts or want to give me some feedback, drop me an email or leave a comment. And don’t forget to tell your friends to pop by on Fridays and pick up their freebies to fill up their iPods.

“Tightwire” by Tom Langford
Over a decade has passed since Langford hitchhiked through Europe, living on bananas, tea, and toast while playing in cafés and bars. Download this track to hear why XM Satellite Radio named him Best New Acoustic Rock Artist of 2005. [Dec 15]

“Do the Coup D’Etat” by Hot One
Not content with having made the transition from post-punk rocker to busy film composer, singer/guitarist Nathan Larson assembled this politically charged band featuring musicians who have worked with both David Bowie and Guided By Voices. [Dec 14]

“Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop” by Romeo
Following in his father’s footsteps, the son of rap mogul Master P has already has four albums and his own Nickelodeon show under his belt. Not one to rest on his laurels, the young man is back with a first single from his latest release, God’s Gift. [Dec 13]

“Confidence” by Motion Man (with Kutmasta Kurt)
You may know this Kool Keith cohort from his many appearances on the Wake Up Show and his work on the Masters of Illusion album with another Keith crony, beatsmith Kutmasta Kurt. The two team up again for this cut from Motion Man’s Pablito’s Way [Dec 12]

“Down” by Terron Brooks
Terron Brooks is an accomplished singer/songwriter/actor who has performed and won fans all around the globe. He has also performed on Broadway in the The Lion King and Hairspray. “Down” is from his new album, coming in early 2007. [Dec 11]

“Calima” by Armik
This accomplished, passionate flamenco guitarist turned pro at 12, has had a unique instrument created for him, and had his music played during the 2004 Summer Olympics. Listen and be moved. [Dec 10]

“Drown You Out” by Amity Lane
Members of former band Trust Company changed their name after getting caught up in the major label shuffle. Now with a new label and a new album, they continue to rock, as on this appropriately titled free download. [Dec 9]

Jeremiah Foster

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Rumors abound that Apple will update or replace their Windowing Interface (Aqua) with a new system. Whether they do or don’t there still is some big news in User Interfaceland. Gtk+ is being ported to the Mac so that it runs natively.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Bumped: If you’ve got a Photoshop CS2 license, you will soon be able to download the Mac CS3 beta. Details here. John Nack of Adobe states the beta should be available within the next 24 hours. FAQ is here.Update: Download is now available here. You’ll need to generate a serial number for the CS3 beta by entering your CS2 serial number here. More updates and first impressions after my download completes and I get time to start playing with the software.

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Here’s a summary of last week’s Mac Freeware & Free & Open Source Software (F/FOSS) from my personal blog. If you have freeware or Open Source software to recommend for Mac users, please post it in a response here (or email the information to me if you prefer to remain anonymous).

iTerm 0.9.4.1208: Better Terminal for Mac OS X
Open Source
Despite Mac OS X’s great graphical interface, you can still get a lot done from the command line of a plain ol’ text terminal window. If you came from the UNIX or Linux world, it is a must-have. I normally have at least one Apple Terminal window open on my Mac. But, I preferred something like Gnome Terminal with a few more options and features. Enter…

iTerm: The Terminal Redefined

iTerm is an Open Source terminal emulator available as an easy to install Mac OS X universal binary. The latest version was released on December 4.

Tabbed shells, bookmarks, and window transparency are only a few of the enhancements you’ll find when using iTerm.

Alice 3D Authoring System (for Kids) from Carnegie Mellon University
Here’s something that the techie-kid in your household with a new computer might find interesting.

Alice v2.0: Learn to Program Interactive 3D Graphics

This 3D authoring system created by the Stage3 Research Group at Carnegie Mellon University is a multi-platform (Linux, Mac OS X, Windows) Java-based Open Source application aimed at students in the middle school to college age range.

Earlier this year Electronic Arts agreed to help fund the development of Alice v3.0 and provide artwork (characters) for use in Alice.

FreeMind: Open Source Mind Mapping
I used to use mind mapping techniques quite a bit. Like most people, I started by simply doodling mind maps on paper to try to organize ideas. Then, I tried MindJet’s Mind Manager at a former job. $200 seemed kind of pricey for software to doodle with once I left that former job though. Then, I found the multiplatform (Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows) Open Source app…

FreeMind - free mind mapping software

…and was able to satify my idea doodling needs. I don’t mind-doodle anymore. But, now that I’ve reminded my…

Widgets and Gadgets
A few weeks ago my Dell notebook’s hard drive died. Since I had to rebuild the system anyway, I decided to install Microsoft Windows Vista instead of XP Professional. I also decided to put the trusty Apple iBook I’ve been carrying to meetings away so that I could immerse myself in Vista to learn in a real world setting (vs. a the test PC I used for beta-testing).

The first thing Windows users ask about while looking at my Vista desktop are the Vista Gadgets in both the Vista Sidebar and scattered undocked on the desktop. Deja vu! It is just like what happened when Apple released Tiger (Mac OS X 10.4) and revealed its Dashboard Widgets.

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Over the past few weeks, lacking anything of real interest to munch on, the Mac world has become ablaze with developer compensation. It started with TextMate, continued with Disco and reached an all-time height on Tuesday with MacHeist. A lot of people who all can claim to develop some piece of code or other publish lengthy articles detailing how, in their opinion, some individual company or person is ripping them or their friends off. There are, indeed, a great many interesting points surrounding the issue of developer compensation. What is an application worth? Is it fair that one guy who merely distributes a few lines of code in a zipped bundle gets more than someone who sweat blood writing the actual thing?

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

If you haven’t had a chance to pop over to Apple’s Leopard developer overviews, you might want to make some time. To date, Apple has released three installments in their Leopard Technology Series. These include a Leopard technology overview, a Leopard devtools overview (Xcode 3.0), and a Leopard developer application technologies overview (i.e. integrating with iChat, animating user interfaces and so forth). If you’re a registered developer, you can also log into ADC-on-iTunes to watch Leopard videos from WWDC.

Bruce Stewart

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Next month’s Macworld show in San Francisco is going to be a busy one for us here at O’Reilly. We’ve got a full line-up of authors speaking at the conference, giving in-booth talks, and participating in special events, and of course some great new books to peruse. We’ll be offering a 25% discount on all of our Mac and Digital Media titles during the show, and if you buy two or more books you’ll also get a free T-shirt (while supplies last).

We’ve also cooked up a special pre-Macworld event that will be held at the esteemed Book Passage bookstore in Corte Madera on January 7 at 7:00 p.m. An expert panel of O’Reilly authors, including Derrick Story, Mikkel Aaland, Stephen Johnson, and Ken Milburn, will be on hand to discuss the state of digital photography and answer questions.

For all the details about O’Reilly’s Macworld events, including a speaker schedule, check out O’Reilly Happenings at Macworld SF 2007. And if you’re at the show, please stop by and say “hi” — we’ll be at Booth #2112 in the South Hall. Hope to see you there!

Oliver Breidenbach

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

In the interest of fair and equitable reporting, I quickly wanted to note two other ideas I find very worthwhile:

  • Child’s Play Day where a bunch of Mac ISPs donated a day’s earnings to a charity and raised $10,000 for Child’s Play. I wish I had paid attention to that when it came through the mac-sb list so that we could have contributed.
  • The Real Week Of Inependent Mac Developers. Although it needs more than Mac developers buying each other’s apps to keep this industry going, it is worthwhile to consider that if you want other people to buy your stuff, you should be positive about buying other people’s stuff and paying them tribute.
Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

XmodFixing.jpg

Creative’s Xmod audio enhancer delivers virtual 5.1 surround sound to your headphones or speaker pair. It’s a great little device. Unfortunately, its default settings on the Mac do not let you experience all the great 5.1 sounds you should be hearing.

Here’s how to fix that.

  1. Connect the Xmod to your computer and your speakers or headphones to the Xmod.
  2. Open /Applications/Utilities/Audio MIDI Setup. This application lets you tweak the system settings for your input and output devices.
  3. Select Creative Xmod from the Default Output pop-up.
  4. Select Creative Xmod from the Properties For pop-up list.
  5. Click Configure Speakers. This is a rectangular button to the right of the Clock Source. A settings window opens.
  6. Click MultiChannel. You’ll find this button at the top-left.
  7. Choose 5.1 Surround from the pop-up at the top-right.
  8. Click Apply.
  9. (Optional) To test any of the virtual speakers, click the rectangle with the speaker name. A brief white noise will sound from that “speaker”.
  10. Click Done.
  11. Your configuration is complete. You may quit from Audio MIDI Setup.

Thanks Jean-Michel.

David Battino

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

AntiRSSThere’s a funny expression middle-aged Japanese salarymen use: shiju kata — 40-year shoulder. It refers to the aching shoulders and neck you develop by hunching over a computer.

To that, I’d add Dry Eye; studies show we blink less when computing.

I’ve tried a variety of onscreen timers to remind myself to take breaks, but all were too obtrusive or complex. Then I found AntiRSI, and so far I’m liking it.

This simple program pops up a small, translucent “stretch” reminder every few minutes (I have it set to ten), and a longer “get up and walk around” box every 50 minutes or so. The slick thing is that the stretch reminder (titled Micro Pause) doesn’t let you cheat. If you so much as touch the mouse while it’s counting down your ten-second stretch break, the timer resets.

Any more healthy computing tips?

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

So, the Illuminous rumors are spreading. Personally, I don’t expect Aqua to be replaced, so much as refined. Every new release of OS X has introduced some changes and refinements, and this will no doubt be the case in Leopard. There’s been a lot of use of bezels, head-up display panels and of shiny black emphasis in recent changes to Apple apps, so it wouldn’t be a surprise to see this year’s refinements heading in that direction too.

Find out what happened when a very old iBook running OS X 10.3 ran out of hard disk space. (What’s more interesting is the reason why it had run out…)

It is true that older users love Macs? In my experience, yes. My mom (62) is deliriously happy with her recently-purchased MacBook.

Writer is a no-distractions writing tool based on Khoi Vinh’s Blockwriter idea, which I ranted against before. I downloaded it and tried it out, but I still can’t see the point of a writing app that doesn’t allow you to delete, and leaves you with text littered with struck-out characters. After five minutes of typing, all I was left with was a mess.

Meg Pickard is a recent newcomer to OS X, but is having problems with iPhoto. And I can sympathise with her on this one. Picasa is one of the few Windows apps which I think does a better job than the OS X equivalent (iPhoto).

System icons as soft furnishings. This is why Mac owners get the “cultist” label…

Oliver Breidenbach

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Something is going on in Mac Developer Land. Factions position themselves, Flamethrowers at the ready. It’s about the Heist. Things are said and replied to and then the tone gets rougher. Is this becoming one of those religious wars that the Mac community is so famous for? Only this time it is good guys against good guys since Apple has taken away the bad guys to boot camp?

People need to calm down.

Here is how I see it: A couple of people got together to find out how to make money on the Mac software market. For themselves, of course. They are trying out ideas. Some are good, some are bad. Some work, some won’t.

Why do they do it? Nobody is exactly sure how to make money on the Mac market. Certainly, good products, good service, a positive attitude, adherence to the “standards” get you a solid business. But nothing spectacular. I mean nothing like a Google or Flikr or YouTube. When was the last time a Mac developer crossed the 50 employees threshold without being bought by Apple or someone else with already more than 49 employees?

I think this is because the group of customers a small developer can reach across the internet is a small proportion of the total Mac users and with the growing number of Mac users, it is also shrinking. Not many people are like you and me online all day surfing the Mac news sites and blogs on the lookout for cool new stuff to put on their Macs. Many more people occasionally go to a mall and enter one of the Apple Stores to spend a nice afternoon and being wooed into buying an iPod or an iMac with iLife. And that proportion of Mac users is growing. People who can help you to get to these people take a huge margin off of your profits. Reaching out to these unsung masses (Apple claims around 25 Million Mac users) is very tough for a small company.

So, new ideas are needed to draw attention. Many of those are not going to work, but we will only know when someone actually tries them.

Now, there is one point very prominent in this discussion: the money. Who makes what and why. You see, I don’t care how much money the MacHeist guys make, I care about how much my company makes and how the Heist brings us forward towards our goals.

Let’s see, if we sold 2,000 copies of FotoMagico in one day, we would have made $160,000. That would have been really cool. But usually we don’t sell as many. In fact, I think most of the 2,000 people who bought the MacHeist bundle on this first day did not buy it for FotoMagico and would never have bought FotoMagico separately. Many of them probably will never use it. Let’s base our assumptions on experience from direct marketing: According to that my gut feeling is that maybe 2% of the people are “real” customers and would buy FotoMagico from us instead of from MacHeist. So that is 40 today. And maybe up to a 100 until the Heist ends.

If you assume that we got $5k for our participation as was reported elsewhere, that is $50 for each license that we may have been able to sell in the same period on our own to the crowd of people buying MacHeist bundles. Not too bad. In fact it is a pretty good deal if you look at what we usually have to spend on advertising to sell a copy. And it gets better: our usual sales have not dropped off significantly and we got 2,000 additional customers who we can maybe convince later to buy other apps or updates from us.

It would be a different story if 5,000 people would buy the MacHeist bundle because of FotoMagico and become “lost” customers. And it would be quite a different story if we wouldn’t get some cash for the licenses.

And for the MacHeist makers: I don’t think they will get terribly rich. They may make some serious money on the Heist, but certainly not nearly as much as to make us jealous or feel ripped off. And you can’t say that they did not work hard to get their share. I know people who worked much less for a lot more profit.

The MacHeist crew has to be applauded for developing and testing new ways to market Mac applications. If they succeed, it may well be that this becomes a good revenue stream for Mac developers. Because if they succeed, the next time, the amount of money that we will demand will increase dramatically. And if it turns out that it was all not worth our while, we simply will have to mark it down as another way not to get rich.

Jeremiah Foster

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Apple’s iPod is going to be immune to the Zune simply because Microsoft has not built an experience, just a beautiful, hobbled media player. Microsoft does not only need to play catch-up, they also need to build a complete experience and ecosystem that work together. That is not something they are good at.

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Years ago (2003, it would appear), I was wondering in public if there was a way for an editor to automagically fetch links for me - so that I could type something obvious, like “Flickr”, and hit some keys, and the editor would find the appropriate web site on Google and fill in all the HTML for me.

Danny O’Brien knocked up some code for BBEdit, which I think I tried but lacked the Python-fu to make work properly. So I gave up and carried on doing things manually.

Kevin Hemenway

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

In response to Wireless Video Streaming from OS X to your TV?, fearless reader Scott noted the Mvix MX-760HD as offered by ThinkGeek. Out of all the possibilities posted, this seemed the most relevant: wireless, internal hard drive (which is entirely optional), USB connectivity, DivX and XviD playback, and composite video connectoids (along with others). After talking with Rich Knitter, MvixUSA’s Director of Marketing, he agreed to send me a review unit with the hope that I also get step-by-step sharing instructions for (the as-yet-tested) OS X.

Welp, I gotta tell ya, I’m pretty happy with this little thing.

Hardware setup was easy - the unit comes with a stand (which seemed a little loose until I found the center sweet spot), USB and composite video cables, a driver CD (which you won’t ever need), remote control (a block of plastic with a central keypad similar to, but not as good as, a TiVo), the requisite power cables, and a 5dBi antenna. While the unit does support HD and progressive scan and all those other high-falutin’ feel-goods, you’ll need to supply your own cables. For this review, I’ve only used composite video because that’s all I (care to, at the moment) have.

I first tested without installing a hard drive (the not-included but provided Maxtor 300GB is one of a few sizes available if you order directly from MvixUSA.com) because my focus was wireless streaming - I wanted my bevy of disks upstairs to combine into one voltronic horde of video bliss. Thus, after a quick load screen (in which DivX was misspelt as “Dvix”), I hopped into the Setup menu and started tweaking the network options. The UI isn’t ugly (see the online PDF manual for some examples), though it does seem a bit syrupy at times, but not enough to be annoying.

What was annoying is its sole support for WEP as a wireless encryption standard. I don’t look forward to reconfiguring all my game consoles, laptops, and handhelds away from the WPA I had been using before. After tweaking my network (as provided by a D-Link DGL-4300), the MX-760HD connected to it just fine, without having to manually specify IPs, routers, DNS, etc.

That left me with just nailing down the actual file sharing. First (tested under 10.4.8), enable OS X’s Samba server by clicking “Windows Sharing” under Apple Menu > System Preferences… > Sharing. OS X will force you to choose which user account can use Windows Sharing but this won’t actually matter to the MX-760HD - it doesn’t send authentication so we’ll need to specifically customize our server to allow guests. We’ll also want to tweak exactly what directories we’re sharing, as opposed to the enabled user’s entire Home directory (note: even if that is what you want, you’ll still need to configure it as “guests ok”, something you’ll probably want to reconsider for security reasons).

There are two different ways to configure the Samba server: by editing the /etc/smb.conf manually or by using a helper application like the donationware SharePoints. SharePoints has an advantage because it will display the read/write permissions of the directories you’re sharing: “everyone” must have “read” access for the files to be shared properly. Before we continue, you may want to disable the default “share the entire home directory” option under SharePoint’s SMB Properties > Home Directories. This is entirely optional.

To share a directory of movies, make sure you’re on the “Normal Shares” tab, create a “Share Name” and “Browse…” to the right Directory. You’ll also want to set the “Windows (SMB) Sharing” dropdown to “Shared (+)”. Finally, click the magical circle to the right of “Show File System Properties”. This drawer will offers an “Allow Windows Guests”, which we’ll need to enable for anything we want the MX-760HD to access. Under “Permissions”, make sure “Everyone” can “r” (read) the directory, otherwise it’ll will appear empty when browsed (note: this WILL change the literal permissions on disk - it’s not just a Samba thing). If you haven’t protected your wireless network with encryption (even if it’s simply WEP, as required here), I’d heartily suggest you do so now. You’ll be asked for your OS X Administrator password to effect any changes you make here. Your final screen should look something like:

Head back over to the MX-760HD and have it “Refresh” its Movie file listing. Should everything go as smoothly as it did for me, they’ll be a bit of a pause as it scans (and caches) the share, but your movie files should be displayed; anything not a recognized movie file is not shown. One of the things I continue to appreciate is the long file name listings: you can actually see more than six or eight characters, and pausing on any one title will scroll the rest of the title in place. I don’t understand why they didn’t use this same interface for the “Recent Items” screen, which is utterly useless in its current icon-based incarnation. Choose what you’d like to watch, and depending on the size of the video, it’ll start streaming to you wirelessly in 10 to 30 seconds. Awesome.

Installation of the optional hard drive is also easy: no tools are required though I did have some troubles getting the single case screw back into place, and it took a few tries of concerted jiggling to align it just right. Once the hard drive is in and connected via USB 2.0 to your Mac, format it with Disk Utility as an “MS-DOS File System” and you’ll be good to go. Mounting the MX-760HD’s hard drive does require its power adapter which can cause a bit of frustration when it’s entangled into the mass of cables behind your entertainment center. Having a laptop in the living room is one solution; a separate internal drive enclosure for drive swapping is another. MvixUSA recently reported that a firmware update will allow mounting over the network as a NAS/NDAS device, but no ETA on this support has been provided.

Of the 20 or so ancient but much-cherished Britney Spears music videos I threw at it, all showed signs of bad cropping - some had a healthy 20 to 30 pixel column missing from the left hand side. Modern day movie rips encoded at 16:9 receive this same chopping on the right side too. This is disheartening but my previous standby, a Philips DVP-642, also suffered the same problem. Digital video software really needs take these files, figure out what dimensions they are at runtime, then display them shrunk to fit into the TV screen with a surrounding border. Either that, or a Zoom Out (nearly everything has Zoom In, why not Out? Cheap solution!) Some folks have suggested this may be due to my use of composite cables, and I cheerful admit my ignorance and luddism.

Codec and playback support was strong: after testing the first few minutes of nearly 150 movies stored on the hard drive, only two or three gave the unit problems. QPEL support is missing, nor can the unit handle the MS-MPEG4v2 codec which all the DAP’s MST3K videos are ripped as, though they admit this is a problem:

However, MS-MPEG4v2 is not without it’s faults, the most obvious of which being that it is a proprietary codec that is no longer in development and is not likely to make its way into settop boxes or consumer electronics anytime soon. While technically a derivative of the MPEG-4 standard, MS-MPEG4v2 does not produce an ISO compliant video stream. What that means from a practical cross-platform standpoint is that when MPEG-4 capable DVD players do start becoming available (or the rumored MPEG-4 based HD-DVD spec), getting MS-MPEG4v2 files to play on them will be a non-trivial task necessitating at the very least transcoding to an ISO compliant codec and the quality loss associated.

There are no current plans to support these codecs in a future firmware upgrade.

I did not test the Photo or Music playing capabilities to any persnickety degree, but the smallest increment of time for image slideshows is three seconds, which turns into roughly six or seven if you’re wirelessly streaming 2 MB digital camera files. It’d be nice if the unit could start caching and requesting early so that a more smoother and faster slideshow transition is possible. There does seem to be some issues with the “Recent Items” function in relation to photos or missing media or perhaps amount of media: after looking at roughly 50 images of a 500 image directory, I deleted that share leaving me with just movies to be watched. However, browsing through the media list to get to the “Setup” menu caused a freeze on the “Photo” item, which showed “Recent Items” that no longer exist. I don’t know the cause, but it was about 90 seconds before I regained control. There doesn’t appear to be any way to delete the “Recent Items” so, at the moment, I’m just avoiding that menu item entirely and used the “Setup” button on the remote. A day later, I am unable to reproduce this particular freeze.

Apparent “freezes” like this happened a little more often than I would like, and it always seemed related to the unit’s rebuilding of a file list that I know has changed. After adding 100 GBs of movies to one directory, a new access to the hard drive (which I’ve coquettishly named “Innards”) caused the unit to appear unresponsive for nearly six minutes, nearly two minutes after I gave up clicking the “Down” arrow to check to see if it was working. Another down arrow finally teased a response, but my original request, to browse the contents of Innards, never happened. Accessing it again gave the lickety-split response I was hoping for and, save for these initial first requests after file modifications, access to large directories continues without incident. With that said, I dare not throw my 22,000 track MP3 library at it anytime soon (nor would I ever, as my sole desire is video watching).

I was unable to test subtitle support heavily, but there do seem to be problems with .sub and .idx files. Though it claims support for them, a Mvix help document suggests converting them to .srt instead; I was unable to get the files I had working (nor did I try to convert them). Another .srt file loaded with no problems, but the subtitles were in Italian so I am unable to confirm if they matched up with the video properly. There is support for timeshifting the subtitles backwards or forwards, and you can also change their position on screen. Finally, the color of the lettering can be changed from the default white to some others, but the font has black borders which should prevent any one color from being washed out by the current scene.

While there are problems here and there with the UI, I’m quite happy to have the MX-760HD as a central part of my video entertainment: I no longer intend to burn DVD-Rs anymore, and the wireless support removes the need for any other moving parts. Hopefully, future firmware updates will hammer out the remaining bugs, but until then, I’m quite happy to route around them: the advantages and other qualities make this combination of hard drive, streaming, and video too powerful to ignore.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Until yesterday, I was completely unaware that Amazon even offered free MP3 downloads. I have no idea how often these change or how often they update their site. This is a first and very experimental post. Let me know whether the links work for you or not.

“Today is the Day” by Apollo Sunshine
Eyes by by Apollo Sunshine
Apollo Sunshine’s new CD, Apollo Sunshine is likely unlike anything else you’re listening to right now. While the record fuses together familiar sounds, it’s a genre-crossing earful that sounds all-new. Try one track exclusively on Amazon.com, then grab another.

“Why Bother It All” from Koufax’s Hard Times Are in Fashion
“Shame and Scandal” from Madness’s The Dangermen Sessions, Vol. 1
’80s favorite Madness is back with a funky bunch of cool covers on The Dangermen Sessions, Vol. 1 and indie rockers Koufax hit their stride with Hard Times Are in Fashion. Download [a] free track from each new release.

“Plasti-Queens” from Shrinking Violets
“Before Kings” from Geoff Byrd’s Shrinking Violets
Great pop songs with catchy hooks that invite you to sing along? Check. Melodies and a great voice? Check. If you’re a fan of Gavin DeGraw or Rob Thomas types, but still love classic pop songs, check out Geoff Byrd’s music. Trust us: You can say you heard him first after he becomes a well-known star. Download two free tracks from Geoff’s CD, Shrinking Violets.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Do you live somewhere without an iTunes store? Or even somewhere with an iTunes store but without any freebies? Feeling a little bit left out and ignored as all those marvelous free items pass you by? Want to get in on the action?

Well, it seems like there may be a slight loophole in the Napster Freebies system. Several international readers (from Australia, France, Germany and the UK) report they’ve been able to download tracks from my O’Reilly Friday Napster posts but not from the Napster site itself.

Do these freebies work for you? Do they play back in iTunes and on your iPod? Let me know in the comments.

“American Me” by C.L. Smooth
Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth made some of the most memorable tracks of hip hop’s Golden Era. Now on a solo mission sans his super-producer partner, C.L. delivers the title track to his solo debut, picking up where he left off. [Dec 8]

“The Land of Pure Imagination” by Roger Joseph Manning, Jr.
His early, insatiable hunger for music led this veteran keyboardist/arranger/singer to gigs with Jellyfish, Moog Cookbook, Air, and Beck.Those influences are reflected in this track’s wild synths, tempo shifts and ’70s-style guitar riffs. [Dec 7]

“The Mating Game” by Bitter:Sweet
Take one founding member of the Supreme Beings of Leisure, mix with the daughter of a founding member of Blood, Sweat & Tears, and you get this cool duo. Listen and be swept away on a sultry yet zany Las Vegas/James Bondish excursion. [Dec 6]

“Fall Away (State I’m In)” by Chris Ayer
This well-traveled bard has been described as “Bright Eyes mixed with James Taylor in the form of James Dean.” Hear it for yourself with this track from his debut full-length album, This Is the Place. [Dec 5]

“Turn” by Socratic
After years of marching with the emo pack, this Garden State foursome has come into its own with the help of producer John Goodmanson of Hot Hot Heat fame. Get it first on Napster. [Dec 4]

“Showbiz” by Lyrycyst
After surviving childhood abuse, this Kansas City, Missouri phenom embarked on a musical mission. This edgy hip-hop grinder from the diverse American Dream presents his positive message while showcasing his substantial skills. [Dec 3]

“What’s Wrong with Me (Nouvelle Vague Remix)” by Skye
Time in the limelight has taught this former Morcheeba singer about inner strength, which she says has helped her writing. “This record is more personal,” she says. “This is my own journey.” This remix lends the track an even more organic feel. [Dec 2]

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

This is what Paul Mison calls the “MacBook upgrade dilemma”. I’m in a position to buy myself a new portable Mac now, and I’m having a hard time deciding which one to get.

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

I’ve long been interested in Open Source applications for proprietary Operating Systems like Microsoft Windows and, more recently, Mac OS X. I’ve only been a Mac user for less than 2 years. But, I’ve been learning a lot by collecting F/FOSS (and free web based services) information on my personal blog as a learning tool. I thought some MacDevCenter readers might find some of the Mac F/FOSS findings interesting too. So, I’ll be posting summaries from my blog here whenever I have an interesting list to contribute. And, if you know of interesting/useful F/FOSS for Mac OS X, please let me know!

Nvu: WYSIWYG HTML Editor
We used to hand code HTML for web pages in the old days. Tools like Frontpage, Dreamweaver, and even good old Windows’ Notepad were commonly used by web developers in those dark days. These days most of us use some kind of Content Mangement System (CMS) or outsource it to a blogging or web management site (often for free). But, every now and then a WYSIWIG HTML editor comes in handy. For me, that now and then event is usually creating some kind of product information table for a product review (such as the ones I sometimes write for the O’Reilly Network. The…

AppleJack Mac Troubleshooter
I haven’t found myself in the position to need this yet. But, the Open Source AppleJack…

AppleJack Project Page

…sounds like something I should learn more about… just in case. It drops you into Mac OS X’s Single User Mode text interface (very familiar to UNIX related OS users) where you can access critical parts of the system to fix hard drive , permissions, caches, and swap file problems.

jEdit Programmer’s Editor
Unlike many programmers who use a single text editor for nearly all tasks, I tend to use a couple of different ones: vi (vim) or nedit for quick edits on UNIX/Linux systems, notepad++ for quick edits on Windows systems, and TextEdit for quick edits on Mac boxes. However, if I know I will be working on something for an extended period, I often choose to use…

jEdit Programmer’s Text Editor

jEdit is a Java-based application with a rich feature set and a larger body of communinty contributed add-on plugin modules. This multi-platform Open Source editor runs on everything I use: Microsoft Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. This means that I don’t have to adjust much in the way of muscle-memory-typing to get things done regardless of what platform I’m using at the time.

CyberDuck 2.7 (Mac OS X)
The Mac OS X Open Source ftp/sftp client CyberDuck 2.7 was just updated. If you’re looking for a GUI ftp client to use on the Mac (or even old UNIX hacks like me who still mostly use ftp and scp from the terminal command line), you might want to take a look at the rich feature set in this Open Source app. In addition to ftp/sftp file transfers, it supports using an external editor for remote file editing and provides a Dashboard widget.

The R Project for Statistical Computing
The R Project for Statistical Computing is an Open Source application with binary installation routines for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows. It is much much more than a simple statistical package. R provides an interpreted statistical programming language that looks a lot like S. The resemblance is so strong that I can use my old S language reference books to work with R.

R provides a graphing facility that goes far beyond what you might have used in spreadsheets like Excel.

R version 2.4.0 was just released last month (October 3).

stikkit: Web Yellow Sticky Notes
stikkit describes their currently free beta-release web product as the digital equivalent of a sticky note: the easiest thing you can grab to jot down an idea or reminder. As you type, Stikkit watches for appointments, to-dos, people, bookmarks and more, magically extracting and organizing the important details.

I just started playing with it today. And, it does seem like something worth returning for some further testing. One of its interesting features is the ability to share a sticky note with other people.

CoreDuoTemp
CoreDuoTemp is a freeware utility for Intel Macs that gives you information about the Mac’s internal temperature and CPU speed.

If you moved from an iBook G4 (which runs very cool) to a 2GHz MacBook (which tends to run hot) like me, you probably had this utility running a lot during this past summer.

Alan Graham

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

As many of you already know, CNET editor, James Kim, was found deceased yesterday, after being missing for 11 days. I didn’t know James personally, but as a writer working in the tech sector and living in San Francisco, it was hard not to feel his presence…especially if you are a lover of digital music. What I personally loved about his writing was that he was not only thorough but extremely passionate…and while we never met, you always seem to get a feeling for a person from their writing, and the personal touch they bring to their work.

If you want a great example of this, read his November 10th piece entitled Music Has the Right to Children.

A couple of excerpts:

“A few days ago, my four-year-old daughter asked me about “that gray thing” sitting atop an unreachable shelf. The gray thing turned out to be an old-school Sony dictation-style cassette recorder–the TCM-313 to be exact. For a (lucky) kid who’s handled everything from Disney’s Mix Max PVP to a PSP and who refers to little shiny gadgets as “iPods,” she had a surprising curiosity about this “mundane” analog device–and the antiquated removable media that went with it.

So I decided it was time to give her a peewee-league tutorial on not only the tape recorder (or even the record player she’d been fiddling around with lately), but on analog audio in general.

It required digging through dusty and forgotten artifacts to find an assortment of store-bought cassettes (The Cars!) and home-brewed mix tapes–some of which were created amidst the mid-’90s “rave” scene, others simply recordings, samples of voices, pretty sounds, and “things.” Predictably, she was much more excited by the latter.”

and

“New parents (and parents to be), if you own an MP3 player armed with a voice recorder, do yourself a favor: record your baby’s first sounds. Record your children’s voices, talking, singing, laughing, and being plain silly. Interview your kids. You’ll be astonished when you listen to these files later. I recently encountered a series of MP3s in iTunes generically ID’ed as “VOICE_040102, “VOICE_040125″ and so on, and after listening to my child’s voice from a couple years back, I value these files more than any other tracks in my bloated library.”

———

One of the things that saddens me most, is that while I knew James from his work, I never did get a chance to met him in person, which considering our geography, is an absolute shame. It would have been an honor to have known him. He was also a true hero who put his family first…always.

If you want to read a wonderful rememberance of James, Eliot Van Buskirk has a lovely tribute.

And if you want to give some type of donation to the family, you can do so here. I’d love to see O’Reilly readers step up and give something.

Also, if you are coming to tonight’s SFWIN event, we’ll be donating our proceeds to the family and are also happy to take any donations at the event.

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

If you ever needed an excuse for buying some shiny new software for your Mac, today you’ve been offered one on a plate. No less than 15 Mac developers have clubbed together to support the Child’s Play charity, which provides toys and games for children in hospital.

If you buy any of the apps listed here today (Thursday December 7th), your money will be donated directly to Child’s Play. Each of the developers has agreed to forego their earnings on these apps, just for today, and donate that money instead. Congratulations are due to all of those enlightened developers for their support.

And if you’ve been thinking about buying Pukka, Delicious Library, VoodooPad, WebNoteHappy, iRooster, Slingshot, Knox, Rolling Credits, or any of the other dozen or so excellent apps included in the deal, now is probably the best time to do it. You don’t just get your app, you get free warm fuzzies thrown in.

Giles Turnbull

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The hoo-ha over Microsoft’s new Office 2007 default file format in Office 2007 seems to have calmed down a little, which is a great relief.

Of course people were going to get upset by headlines like “The lock-out begins for Office Mac users”, but in reality that was never on the cards in the first place. Microsoft is doing things the way it has always done; Mac users are not its first priority.

Jeremiah Foster

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

With the advent of the DMCA, content producers like record companies and movie studios are encroaching on the rights of ordinary citizens. How about us taking some of those rights back? There already is a digital consumer’s bill of rights out there that is reasonable, take a look at digitalconsumer.org’s example. It seems pretty straightforward.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

BadwareAlertscaled.jpg

Google loves me,
This I know:
Into bad sites
I shall not go.
In Safari, I may surf
But Google keeps me from bad turf.
Mac were made for fools like me
But Google keeps them malware free.

Click image for full-sized error message

Jim Farley

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Apple’s army of Geniuses are a quiet but undeniable force in market penetration and customer retention. This is not breaking news, but I just experienced this firsthand, in very unlikely circumstances. And though there’s no real technical meat here, I feel compelled to tell an unusually happy service story, because that doesn’t happen very often.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

My husband walks into my office. Bragging. “With any luck, my new 4.0 GHz machine will be installed in my office today. Probably before noon.” He practically swaggers with pride at this announcement.

I am staggeringly unimpressed by the news. “I don’t see what you’re so excited about. After all is said and done, you’re still stuck using a Windows machine.” I look meaningfully at my Mac.

The husband thinks for a while, grasping for reasons that this is a good thing. Finally, he replies, “Well, I can still do e-mail and web surfing on it!”

Todd Ogasawara

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Parallels released a new beta (Build 3036) of Parallels Desktop for Mac (my personal favorite Mac App of the Year). The list of enhancements and new features is long… really long. Head over to the forum posting at Parallels to read the full details.

Parallels Desktop for Mac (Beta) Build 3036

A couple of the ones that interest me most are:


  • Drag and drop files and folders between Windows and Mac
  • Read/write Apple Boot Camp partition
  • Coherence: Display individual Windows apps as if they were Mac OS X apps

Windows Vista Build 5744 froze at startup after rebooting to install the new Parallels Tools for Windows. But, hey, its a beta. And, maybe I missed a step somewhere when upgrading Parallels Tools. In any case, I have a backup image of it and can either try again with that or install a real released Build 6000 instead.

I’m upgrading my Parallels virtual machine of Ubuntu Linux as I type this blog item. And, that seems to be going well. I can try Vista again later.

Gordon Meyer

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

In today’s Chicago Tribune, Dan Lewis, a Mac user from Aurora, Illinois (home of Wayne’s World, by the way) talks about his Mac-based home theatre setup in the article Computers serve films on demand. He’s using an iMac as a media server and a Mac mini aside his TV to provide instant access to 100 DVDs, 12,000 songs, and over 4,000 photos. The article touches on Front Row, Bonjour, and other familiar pieces. It’s a neat example of living the “digital lifestyle” and points out how inexpensive it can be to put together a rather sophisticated solution, provided that you use a Mac.

Erica Sadun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

In a recent MacDevCenter article, I discussed how to build interactive iPod experiences using the iPod’s “museum mode”. As a supplement to that article, here are a number of museum podcasts that you might enjoy listening to.

SFMOMA Artcasts
An insider’s take on the museum and its exhibits. More than mere museum tours, SFMOMA Artcasts paint vivid audio portraits of artists and their works. Listen to Chuck Close describe his style and process as he walks through the gallery. Hear Kiki Smith recall her inspiration for the works in a 2005 retrospective. Or discover what guest curators and fellow audiences have to say about exhibits at SFMOMA.

Miami Metro Zoo
Complete guided tours of the zoo from the comfort of your iPod. Peruse audio information on animal diet, habitat, range, and more. Hear lions roar even when they’re sleeping, courtesy of animal sounds that accompany each exhibit. Take a musical tour of every geographic region represented in the zoo with song selections chosen by a noted ethnomusicologist. Miami Metrozoo podcasts also feature animal folklore from around the world, so you can learn more about the relationship between animals and humans in different cultures. The zoo podcast: It’s one wild idea whose time has come.

Chateau de Versailles
Bringing a nearly 400-year-old palace into the iPod age sounds like a daunting task, but that’s exactly what the Digital Grand Versailles Project has set out to do with Louis XIV’s magnificent Versailles chateau and gardens. With an aim to “reposition Versailles as the main place for culture and technical capability, as it once was under Louis XIV,” the project kicks off with audio and video podcasts featuring the Gardens of Versailles and Marie Antoinette’s Trianon.

NYMOMA
101 episodes, providing a wide range of lectures about MOMA exhibits.

de Young Museum (San Francisco)
Presenting news, features and hidden treasures from San Francisco’s new de Young museum. Each episode includes information about current and upcoming exhibitions ad public programs, as well as interviews with artists, museum visitors, curators, conservators, and educators

Derrick Story

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

logitech_z-10_speakers.jpg

I’ve been testing the stylish Logitech Z-10 Interactive Speaker System designed to replace the speakers built-in to our Macs and provide richer, deeper sound. These tabletop beauties drive 30 watts of power to 1-inch dome tweeters and 3-inch high-excursion woofers. They also have an unique “interactive” backlit display that provides information about the music playing, plus controls for volume, bass, treble, and a host of other goodies.

I really like the sound produced by the Z-10s, but was disappointed to see that the software accompanying the speakers was for Windows only. Does that mean that they aren’t a good choice for my Mac audio set-up? Hardly. Thanks to the “universality” of USB, and the cleverness of Mac OS X, I can still take partial advantage of Logitech’s interactive display by making a few adjustments in my Mac’s Sound preference pane. And for newer Macs that include Front Row, you can actually control the Logitech speakers with the remote because it adjusts volume at the System level.

At $149, the Z-10s do qualify as an investment. But if you’ve been depriving yourself of rich tabletop audio, these speakers are indeed a treat for the ears.