Vanilla 1 is no longer supported or maintained. If you need a copy, you can get it here.
HackerOne users: Testing against this community violates our program's Terms of Service and will result in your bounty being denied.
MacTips - for Mark's new Mac
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
I realize you're just the messenger, but that's the biggest load of horseshit I've ever heard.
Logical grouping doesn't drive usability. But for argument's sake, let's take that to be true. Grouping things that are similar in the same place can take on various levels of meaning. For example, having the x on the right-hand side of the "tab strip" is still grouping them in the same place.
But what is the purpose of the x? To close tabs, right? What if you want to close five tabs? If you put the x on the tab, you've got to move your mouse five times to find each x. But in it's current spot in firefox, you just click five times and don't move your mouse at all. If you are using a touchpad and the x is on each tab, this can get very frustrating very fast.
Whatever. I could go on all day, but it pisses me off when people get so caught up with semantics and it ruins the fun for the user.
8. VirtueDesktops (link)
Definatly the sexiest virtual desktop app I've tried on OS X. Give it a spin. It resonates with beautiful mac ui goodness and it's really handy that you can bind programs to a specific virtual desktop (through the Inspect Applications menu).
- Console and Activity Monitor are your best friends! I have them set up at launch to run! Activity Monitor allows you to monitor your processors, memory and disk space and you can choose to watch this all in your dock! Find it in Applications > Utilities
- Gmail notifier - if you use gmail this is a must.
- Parallels - for when you need to run XP or check your site in XP or anyother OS for that matter.
- Firefox plug-in called FlashBlock. My number one problem with Firefox was flash ads loading and when you have multiple tabs open with multiple instances of flash running it kills your processor! FlashBlock is one of my favorite plug-ins!
- TextMate is my text editor of choice. It's a majpr time saver and even allows you to run shell scripts directly in the interface. If you haven't watched the screen casts to see what this thing can do, don't delay, check it out now! TextMate Screen Casts
- CSSEdit - I use this sometimes just to do a quick style sheet for websites. Great for setup and small tweaks.
- Voodoo Pad - It's like having a wiki in an App. This text editor allows me to save all sorts of snippets, urls, passwords etc. All in wiki like interface with full search capabilites. It can also encrypt pages and it even syncs with your iPod!
- LinoType FontExplorer - Simply the best font organizer out there and it's free. It just works!
check Macupdate.com for latest versions:
- Mplayer or VLC - Plays .avi, wmp and all sorts of other files quicktime has a hard time with.
- Transmission - the best bit-torrent app.
And speaking of not using your mouse. One thing that really annoyed me was the way that you could only resize windows from the bottom right. Enter GeekBind.
9. GeekBind (link) - I haven't tested it on intel macs yet
GeekBind allows you to set keyboard shortcuts for widow resizing, hiding, moving and other stuff. So for example I have option+` set so that when I hold those down and move my mouse, no matter where it is on a window, it will drag the widow around my desktop (without disrupting window order). Holding option+ctrl+` allows me to resize the window from anywhere, by dragging in or out from my current position. I adjusted the default settings because the overlays were too opaque, but other than that it's a pretty nice little app.
Edit: Moving a window does not curently work on intel macs, resizing does.
I guess the moral of the story is that everybody has their prefrence.
Here is one source for anybody who is interested: http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/ben/archives/009210.html
- Lets start with Macupdate.com (MU) and VersionTracker.com (VT). This is where you'll find the latest updated software with comments, reviews and screeshots by other mac users. Search the following apps there.
- Marc Liyanage's PHP and MYSQL Packages
Mac OS X as an Apache server already built in but you need these packages to install PHP and MYSQL. Then using Terminal (to edit the httpd.conf) and NetInfo Manager to add records, you can add as many virtual servers as you want and develop your web apps offline, sipping beer on couch
- CocoaMySQL or MySQL Administrator and MySQL Query Browser (both from mysql.com) for all your SQL needs
- SunriseBrowser is a web browser aimed at the web designers/develepers audience and has a lot of useful features
- Xyle scope is like a CSS "reverse engineering" app. If you do CSS, this is a lifesaver.
- OmniOutliner and OmniGraffle (or the pro versions) are my brainstorm storm apps. I can outline my ideas with OO and then put them on a visual context with OG.
- DEVONthink PRO is my secondary brain. It's a "everything" manager so you don't need to remember everything.
- Merlin is "the" project manager for the mac platform. Still a bit unknown but it will rock your socks off
- I'm a web designer/developer and I do all my code in BBEdit. It's expensive but it's the best.
- WebnoteHappy is a bookmarks manager done right.
- Endo a rss reader and much more.
- Color Schemer Studio and Color Consultant Pro are one of those apps that you'll need when you are doing web design work.
- DiskCatalogMaker creates a blazing fast searchable database of all your (removable) media.
- VLC (videolan client) is the best opensource video player for the mac.
- Finally I must add that Apple's iLife apps and default system apps are the most useful things you'll have on your mac. While in the windows world each app has it's own view and way of doing things, on the mac side almost everyone relies and integrates on/with those (fantastic) apps that come with the OS.
Address Book probably the perfect example. If you have a bluetooth phone, you can use iSync to sync your phone's address book with your mac's Address Book (app). The vast majority of apps that have or need an address book, will choose to integrate with Apple's than to add their own address book.
- And because Apple has numerous guidelines for developers to follow, most keyboard shortcuts will work on all apps so most hard core mac users end up using their keyboard > 80% of the time. Add tools like Quicksilver or LaunchBar and your productivity will increase even more.
Congratulations on your new mac and welcome
two things i didn't see mentioned:
SSHKeychain - gui ssh keychain, interfaces with the apple keychain for passphrases.
Fugu - gui scp client. i haven't had a lot of opportunity to use this yet, but don't let the website throw you off... it looks a lot better than their site.
edit: also, textwrangler, is a feature-stripped, free version of bbedit, for those of us who only want to edit save and exit. like what? i've had a nagging suspicion that there's a LOT more to this little program than just launching programs via the keyboard (which is cool as hell), but no one that i've seen use it really knows. what more can it do?
An alarm system for your MacBook Pro. Use your remote to "lock" your mac. If someone moves it (setting off the built in motion sensor), closes the screen, or touches the trackpad / keyboard the alarm will sound. Muting doesn't work as it overrides that option. Oh and it also makes a cool car lock and unlock sound. Even if you don't use it for "security" it's still pretty jiggy.