Tech Thoughts

Ten Tiny and Amazing Mac Apps You’ve Never Heard Of

June 15th, 2010

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Air Video Server – Free

This is a great little app that for people who have lots of videos on their computer, but want to watch them on your iPhone, iPod Touch, and an iPad. Previously what I had to do was to convert the videos to MP4 (often a very slow process), import them into iTunes, and tweak the metadata. Only then could I watch the movies I have on my iDevices. That still wasn’t a great solution, since those videos then took up space on those devices.

This app is really a tiny file server that runs on the same computer on which your videos are stored. You can point it to any number of directories containing your videos, including attached servers, and it’ll stream them live to any of your iDevices. The other great bonus is it’ll convert from basically any video format — on the fly. Brilliant.

Appfresh – Free

I’ve always been an early adopter and, probably to my detriment, I always want to try the latest versions of programs. Appfresh will scan your Applications folder and compare your versions with the latest versions. Within a minute, it’ll have a list of programs that need updating. You can always pick and choose which to update — it suggests beta versions, so if you’re not up to a pre-release version, you can opt to not update that app.

Keep vigilant, though, for big upgrades to paid programs (i.e., from 3.1 to 4.0) — they may drop a new version that wants you to pay for an upgrade, leaving you to manually find and re-install the old version (if it’s still available on the developer’s site!).

Caffeine – Free

Several years ago, I was speaking at a conference in the afternoon and I had time to attend the whole day’s events. The fellow doing the morning keynote had his notebook up on the stage and he had slipped out the back to make a last minute visit to the restroom. As his computer had been waiting there through a 15-minute coffee break, his screen saver kicked in. This wouldn’t have been a problem, except it was one of those photo slideshows of everything in his iPhoto collection. He didn’t have much in there, except racy photos of he and his wife! I’ve never seen a conference organizer run up to the stage so fast to slam the lid down on the notebook.

Caffeine puts an icon in your menu bar that, when activated, prevents your Mac from automatically going to sleep, dimming the screen, or starting screen savers. It’s a toggle switch so you just click it again to go back to normal settings. I use this when my MacBook Pro is sitting on stage waiting for me to get up and give a presentation, so I don’t suffer a similar fate.

Call Recorder (Skype) – $19.95 U.S.

This is such a great little app, I tell as many people about it as I can. It’s a tiny recording window that pops up any time Skype is activated. Whenever you place any kind of Skype call (Skype-to-Skype, Skype-to-phone, or videocall) it records it as a .mov file on your hard disk. You can tell it to not record calls that are fewer than, say 30 seconds long, and it comes with a MOV to MP3 conversion tool. (The problem with that tool, though, is it resets the timestamp of the file. The program really should offer a save-in-MP3-format option.

I now do all my pre-event client calls using Skype. Once the recording is finished, I just save it into that client folder so I can review it whenever I want. (Another nice touch: It can also save automatically to an iTunes playlist.)

JumpCut – Free

Whenever I re-install my operating system (luckily, this has been a pretty rare necessity since switching from PC to Mac) JumpCut is the first app I reinstall.

JumpCut is a fast, low-memory clipboard alternative. Instead of using Command-V to paste, if you do Shift-Command-V and keep that combination held down, you can use the cursor keys to navigate between the last 99 things you copied to the clipboard. Release the keys and it pastes your selection in place as if it were the last thing you copied.

Another nice, probably accidental, function is if you use the regular Paste, the Mac will paste using the formatting of the originally copied text. If you use the JumpCut Paste, your pasted text will inherit the destination formatting.

JustNotes - DonationWare

CatherineOmega has been talking up the great little web utility SimpleNote. Simplenote replaces the Notes app on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad. When you download Simplenote, you get free access to their web app, so you can access your notes from anywhere. Simplenote really is just a simple online database.

While, of course, you can access your notes by logging into the web site, this service really shines when you access it through simple desktop apps like JustNotes. Catherine uses Notational Velocity on her Mac to access her notes, but I prefer the cleaner UI of JustNotes. Both sit in your menu bar. Click it to see your notes, use the simple search function, and any changes are automatically synced back to the web database, so your iDevices are kept in sync as well. My grocery lists moved here when I first started using them and they haven’t left.

Levelator – DonationWare

If you do any audio work — especially when there are uneven levels — you really need Levelator. This program analyzes your audio file and carefully adjusts the volume of all elements so they’re more or less the same. This is a process called “normalizing” in the audio business. Levelator’s normalizing is one of the smartest I’ve seen — it even slowly starts to fade up a level in advance of low-level portion of audio, so that you don’t really notice any background audio changing suddenly. Very clean and simple operation — just drag your audio file onto the window.

There are two downsides. First, the program only handles uncompressed AIFF and WAV audio files. You’ll have to convert any other files, like MP3, to another format before processing, then re-compress after processing, losing a bit of fidelity, depending on how compressed you’ve set your MP3 compression. Second (and I know this is picky), you can only drag the file onto the window the app creates. You should be able to keep Levelator in your dock then drag files on top of there, have Levelator open, process the files, then close. Nothings perfect in life though, right? ;-)

RescueTime - Free for basic account

In case you’ve ever caught yourself on a Friday thinking “Man, where on Earth did this week go?!”, RescueTime can tell you exactly where it went. This tiny menubar app quietly watches what you do on your computer — which web sites you visit (um…), which programs you run, how much time you take away from the keyboard, and so on. Then, you can pull a report at any time.

What’s even more cool is you can set “productivity levels” for each activity or web site. For instance, when I surf tmz.com, it scores that as -2 productivity. When I’m working on my own web site, it scores that as +1. When I’m in Keynote, that’s +2 productivity. You can even set targets — very cool when it emails you to say you just achieved four hours of productive time (which, oddly, makes me want to call it a day!).

RSS Menu – Free

Like most avid blog readers, I use a RSS feed aggregator (Google Reader, in my case) to follow my favourite blogs. But there are a handful of blogs that I want to be alerted as soon as they publish. That’s what RSS Menu, another menubar app, does. You just give it the RSS feed URL of the blogs you want to track, and it’ll check them every few minutes (you control the frequency). If there’s new content, it’ll alert you via Growl (and optional speech) — click on the notification and it’ll take you right to the new post.

RSS Menu is donationware and can integrate with iTunes podcasts and Safari RSS feeds.

XSlimmer – $14.95 U.S.

Back when Apple switched from Motorola processors to Intel processors, all the applications had to switch as well. The way most developers did this was to distribute a “universal binary” which contained the instructions to run on either microprocessor.

It’s been years since any Motorola processors were used to run Macs and there’s a 99% chance you’re on Intel. (Any Mac bought in the last five years or so runs Intel.) But many apps still contain the universal code. Xslimmer basically checks to see which applications still contain the old code and removes it — recovering disk space (sometimes a significant amount!) in the process.

Xslimmer is very safe. It has a blacklist of programs it knows about which can’t handle removal of the old code, and I have never once had a problem with any “neutered” program.

Bonus: DropBox – Free for basic 2GB box

Dropbox is basically your own personal hard disk on the Internet. When you drag files to the Dropbox folder on your computer (it looks just like any other folder) those files are automatically synced with your Dropbox folder on the Internet. Then, you can access them from any web browser, iPhone, iPad, Blackberry, etc. You get 2GB of storage free just for signing up — if you haven’t got an account yet, sign up free here and you and I will both get 250MB of extra space!

Shaw Cablevision and the Stupidity of Bundling

June 14th, 2010

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Shaw Cablevision logo It seems that every time I contact Shaw Cablevision, I come away somewhere between disappointed and furious. After several months without cablevision, I decided to re-connect to watch my summer reality show guilty pleasures.

Shaw — like many cable providers, to be fair — bundle their most popular channels, forcing you to pay arbitrarily high prices for the single channel you want.

  • If you want HBO — just HBO — you’ll have to pay for four movie channels.1
  • If you want just TSN2, you’ll be forced to pay for channels 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, and 872 even if you never plan to watch them.

This bundling is pitched to consumers as offering “better value.” In reality, it’s a way of obfuscating the price.

My Dream Ad Campaign

Just once, I’d love to see an ad from a cable provider in which the CEO, straight to camera, says

“We know our bundling makes ordering services from us confusing. That’s why from now on, each individual channel costs $3. Order as many or as few as you want. And take only the channels you want.”

The Sound of Shaw’s Silence

But we won’t hear this from Shaw. Actually, we never hear much of anything from the company. Shaw is a notoriously tight-lipped, family organization. It’s privately held and only the CEO-Owner, Jim Shaw, speaks on behalf of the company. Or, I should say, doesn’t speak. When covering technology for the CBC, I occasionally had to call Shaw for comment on related stories — not a single call for comment was returned.

Jim ShawPhoto J McIntosh/CP

And good luck finding any social media channels — I couldn’t find a single Facebook page or group for the company, and the variants of Shaw’s name I guessed on Twitter clearly aren’t owned by the company.

Ordering Is Broken

Let’s say you opt to take your chances with the bundling game and add channels anyway — you’ll be doing it by phone since there’s no way to activate channels online. Shaw’s online customer care centre, at the time of this writing, actually returns a web server error. Classic.

Shaw error

Shaw would do well to get some basics underway — a monitored Twitter account and a Facebook page at the very least — and start listening to customers. It wouldn’t take much. For the time being, I’m holding http://twitter.com/shawcablevision. Jim, when you’re ready…

UPDATE: Apparently, Shaw has just hired someone to handle social media stuff. (Hat tip to Colleen.)

  1. Three separate Movie Channel channels, plus a high-def version of one of the channels. []
  2. Canadian time-shifted channels []

Apple’s One Big Design Flaw

June 13th, 2010

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There’s no denying that Apple makes beautifully designed products. From the simplicity of the Mac Mini to the impossibly tiny iPod Shuffle, Apple wins design kudos for form and function all time time.

But there’s one big flaw in Apple’s design of the iPhone and iPad that still hasn’t been fixed — the onboard speakers.

On both the iPhone and iPad, the speaker is located on the rim of the product — which means that when you’re looking at the screen and listening to audio, the audio is shooting out away from you. This isn’t a problem for audio that’s recorded at decent levels, but so many videos out there (especially those on YouTube) are recorded with levels that are way too low. Cranking up the volume doesn’t help.

I often end up having to hold my iPhone in this position:

iphone cupping

Although silly looking, this actually increases the volume significantly. On my audio test, cupping your hand in front of the speaker increased the decibel level from a peak of 70db to a peak of 78db. Since dB levels are logarithmic, this is quite an increase in the volume.

All Apple would have to do is locate the speakers on the front to provide better quality audio. (Misdirected audio also tends to drop a lot of the high-end frequency ranges, making the audio also sound muddier and duller.)

I’ve MacGyver’ed a solution for my iPad — tin foil (folded over several times to make it thicker) taped to the back and shaped in the same hand-cup form. It’s goofy looking, but works like a charm and makes listening a much better experience.

Tin foil solution

Griffin, which makes excellent ‘iProduct’ accessories, has an acoustic amplifier that looks great, but isn’t quite portable. ThinkGeek has come up with a simple but awesome solution — the iPhone Audio Booster is a simple piece of plastic that clips onto the bottom of your iPhone and essentially forms a plastic cup that does the same thing. Genius. And only $8.

Screen shot 2010-06-13 at 5.35.41 PM.pngStill, the right solution is for Apple to simply locate speakers on the front. Steve? Please?

N.B. On the iPad, speakers on both ends would also be good to provide stereo listening. But I’ll take what I can get. ;-)

 

When Virus Warnings Become Their Own Viruses

May 21st, 2010

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This morning, the University of Calgary breathlessly released a news release titled Danger in the Internet Café.

It reports on a new computer virus that can sneak onto your computer from other infected computers via unencrypted wireless signals, like the ones typically found in Internet cafés. From there, like most viri these days, it plants adware. The only difference between this and other viruses is it spreads from computer-to-computer on unencrypted networks, not by you opening an email.

Oh, and one more thing.

It doesn’t actually exist.

News releases from universities and computer-virus software manufactures are a kind of virus unto themselves. When you cover technology, you get them all the time. The formula is the same — a provocative headline saying there’s a new threat, that everyone needs to (a) download the University’s white paper, or, (b) buy/upgrade your anti-virus software.

Somewhere, buried several paragraphs down, is the confession that the virus doesn’t actually exist; it’s actually just a hypothetical one created in a lab. (To its credit, at least the University of Calgary’s news release calls it a “potential” threat in the first paragraph.)

You’ve got to hand it to whoever wrote the news release, though. They compare the (non-existent) virus to Typhoid Mary, the first person to contract and spread typhoid fever. Typhoid fever it transmitted over the air — hence, the likeness to the potential computer virus. They even coined the phrase “Typhoid adware.” Clever.

The best part, though, is the graphic the white paper uses to explain how the virus works:

Man. That’s one mean-looking virus! ;-)

The paper Typhoid Adware can be found: http://pages.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/~aycock/papers/eicar10.pdf

Asus AiGuru SV1T Review – Skype Phone

March 22nd, 2010

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Tod Maffin (http://www.todbits.com) reviews the Asus AiGuru SV1T Skype phone. Overall, it’s a great unit — can be untethered for use via battery and wireless. Very simple use, big touch-screen, simple setup. Thanks to Jessica Samuels from AM 1150 Radio in Kelowna B.C. and Ben Eadie from MechanicalMashup.com for testing help. For more about Tod Maffin, check http://www.todmaffin.com
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