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'Mac OS' Category

02/11/08

Mac OS My top 10 plus one Mac Apps

A while ago, in some get-rich-with-your-blog post, I read about how popular top 10 lists were and how they boost traffic in your blog. Well, it has taken me a while but it’s time to make big euros with mine by posting my top 10 fave apps for the Mac. Another reason would be that I promised too long ago my dear colleague Stellios , new to the Mac world, I would do it.

Out of the many apps I chose those that will help you with your productivity and won’t cost you a fortune. In my case I use all these on a daily basis.

Read the rest of this entry »

30/05/08

How I learnt to love MarsEdit over Ecto and hate TextMate

I’m writing this on a lobby before a meeting with a client. Thanks to MarsEdit, a nifty desktop blogging app, I can write this while I’m offline and worry later about publishing this post.

Nothing new actually, as I had been using Ecto previously. But somehow, with the improvements to the Wordpress post editor and with the vision of “doing more with less” I ended up not using it at all. It got fed to AppZapper after a while.

But times change and posting in four different blogs currently, I thought I could use a little help from a desktop app.

With that philosophy in mind I tried to use TextMate, which I already use for programming, as a publishing client. TextMate’s versatility allow for that and much more and is the blogging tool of choice for many bloggers.

My experience with TextMate:

  • Configuration is done and kept in a flat txt file
  • Posts are not automatically synchronized with those of your database. You just write in a flat txt file that gets uploaded via rpc to your blog.
  • No local copy of the posts is kept on your computer unless you save the file as a flat text file
  • Categories are not passed down to TextMate from WP so you actually need to remember them and add them as meta information on your, again, flat text file
  • I didn’t get any further

TextMate may be the best editor for the Mac OS (despite its funny tab management) but as a desktop publishing app is a nightmare.

At that point I left the “do more with less” philosophy to embrace the “do the right thing with the right tool”, which brought me back to Ecto, a nice app that worked extremely fine for me a couple of years ago. But when you use a Mac for a while you start to get very picky about the design of the user interface and functionality of the apps.

You want apps that are laid out nicely, have an internal and external user interface coherence, that are not too much bloated with features and excel at doing the essential. Ecto sure does a lot of stuff but the app somehow doesn’t look and feel right on Leopard.

So I decided to try MarsEdit, a blogging client extremely similar to Leopard’s Mail that also follows the one window approach.

My Experience with MarsEdit:

  • Setting up the blogs was as easy as feeding MarsEdit the URLs and entering ID and password. No need to know where the xmlrpc file sits
  • I automatically downloaded my 10 last posts and all my available categories
  • No learning curve. Posting is as easy as sending a mail
  • A live preview that shows you the final render of the post as you type. No need to reload constantly
  • Ability to use TextMate (or any) as your favorite external editor
  • Blog this! Bookmarklet on your browser
  • Flickr integration. Enter you FlickrID and password, authorize the app, and all your pics are ready to be blogged
  • Upload files with just drag and drop on your post
  • Easily republish same content to another blog
  • Spellcheck as you type
  • Applescript support
  • Works with WordPress, Blogger, TypePad, Movable Type, LiveJournal, Drupal, and Vox
  • Growl! integration

I use MarsEdit to post to:
ganyet.com
iosephdurgell.org
RAC1.org/elmon
wearemortensen.com/blog

11/11/07

Mac OS free App: Capture, edit, and post your image with a click

ImageWell is a small, but powerful, image editing application that lets you quickly resize, crop, watermark, edit your images, take screenshots and then upload them to the web, save to your computer or email them.

It really helps to streamline the process of posting images to your blog and it supports many ftp or mac accounts.

The top feature: it copies the image URL to the clipboard. A blessing.

The product’s claim: “A blogger’s best friend”

Did I mention it’s free?