Archive for the 'Apple' Category

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Reconsidering Commitments

One of my heroes, Merlin Mann, did a talk at Macworld called “Living with Data“. Although I was disappointed that it didn’t deal with my favorite second officer of the USS Enterprise, I enjoyed it. It’s long, but very entertaining. As I watched it last night, I found myself inspired.

I thought my personal productivity system was air-tight. I’ve been getting my tasks done – or so I’ve thought. But as I listened to Merlin’s talk, one point in particular resinated with me.

At 25:12 in, Merlin asks, “Who gets access now?” That is, who will I let interrupt me as I’m working? I looked around my desktop. Gmail notifier, Twitterrific, and Adium are constantly demanding my attention. I’m changing my use of these applications. I’ve decided to only use Adium when I’m actually open for conversation or have to post where I am, I’m axing Twitterrific in favor of the canonical twitter website, and I’ll check my email twice a day or so.

And then I got to thinking about Quicksilver. I love Quicksilver; it’s an application launcher on steroids. One of the plugins I use for Quicksilver is the Camino Bookmarks plugin. I can evoke Quicksilver using my keyboard shortcut (command + enter), type the first few letters of any website I’ve bookmarked, and press return to load that page. For example:

f – facebook
g – gmail
r – google reader
d – digg
p – pownce

Because those time-suck websites are so easily accessed, I go to them far too often. My new productivity experiment is to disable the Camino bookmarks feature of Quicksilver and see how much of my life I get back. Instead, I’ll check those sites in the morning, at night, and maybe when I have a free moment at school.

It’s amazing to realize that the tool you appreciate the most to save time is what’s actually causing you to habitually waste it.

Cleaning an iTunes Library

I’m the proud owner of a shiny new iPod Touch. It’s a considerable upgrade from my previous portable music player – a 6GB iPod mini with a broken headphone port. It served me well as a car iPod, though.

The iPod Touch is both a blessing and a curse. It’s a wonderful media player and an even better Internet and email device. But, when you’re looking at your iTunes library on its superb screen, you realize just how badly your ID3 tags and album art are.

I spent a large part of this holiday (happy President’s Day!) cleaning up the cruft from years of accumulating music. Luckily, there are some great pieces of software on the Mac and web services to do this.

  • iEatBrainz (Freeware) – The Mac OS X client of MusicBrainz analyzes any tracks you feed it and compares its musical ‘fingerprint’ with a known database.
  • Album Art Thingy (Shareware) – This inexpensive app looks up your currently playing track on Amazon.com and tries to find artwork. It does lyrics, too.
  • Amazon.com (Service) – Whatever Album Art Thingy doesn’t get, you can get yourself by searching the MP3 store.
  • Last.fm (Service) – This social network site helps see if you’ve done your ID3 tags right.

It’s really worth it to clean up the cruft from your iTunes library. You’ll not only delete music you don’t like anymore, but you’ll have a greater appreciation for the music you do like. The album art browsing in iTunes, Front Row, and an iPod is really great looking, too.

Good luck, and be sure to share your experience in the comments.

Living on a Slow Mac

My MacBook Pro returns from its extended hiatus today, Monday. Over the last twelve days, I’ve been living on a 450mhz PowerMac G4 Cube with 640 MB of RAM. It’s eye-opening not only how difficult the transition has been for me, but how usable the older and slower machine actually is.

Moving down from a 2.16 Core2Duo MacBook Pro with 2GB of RAM is difficult for a few reasons. The first is just plain speed. Running Camino, my Macintosh web browser of choice, was painful on the Cube. There were optimized builds available, which helped somewhat, but browsing was slow and unpleasant. Loading a comment thread on Digg caused the browser to lock up for around ten seconds, playback of Flash videos (like the ones on YouTube) was tricky, and having more than four tabs open turned the browser into a snail.

The second difficulty in jumping to a computer introduced in July of 2000 is its operating system. My MacBook Pro runs Apple’s recently introduced version of Mac OS X, Leopard. As we know, the G4 Cube can run Leopard, but it is largely unstable. Thus, for the last twelve days, I’ve been using Mac OS X Tiger. Although Leopard has bugs that I often twitter about, it is the most impressive operating system I have ever used. The perspective I have from running this antiquated computer for so long lets me see that.

My third difficulty was not being able to do certain tasks. For example, I encountered a major design bug on my site this week thanks to a reader email (thanks, Michael Clark!), but could not fix it. I couldn’t trust the Cube to run the all of software I use to fix up Exposay (Transmit, Coda, Safari, Firefox, Opera) at the same time. I’ll fix the bug as soon as possible.

Doing a key school assignment in the last week was very difficult on this computer. My word processor of choice is Office 2008 for the Mac, which is a very slow and very unstable application on a 450mhz PowerPC G4. To be fair, its requirements clearly state that a PowerPC G4 processor must be clocked at 500MHz or faster for it to run acceptably.

I pushed this machine to its limit this week. I had Camino, Adium, iTunes, Finder, TextEdit, Dictionary, Last.fm, Twitterrific, QuickSilver, and the Gmail Notifier running at almost all times. Although it was most definitely difficult to use, the machine never crashed once, even under long stretches of 100% CPU load.

Really, I’m fortunate to have purchased this extra computer. For what I spent on it, $250, it really came in handy. Besides serving as my Mom’s computer, it never hurts for me to have a backup machine. If it ran Leopard natively, it would have been perfect. I would have just cloned by MacBook Pro’s hard disk to it and carried on as usual. That’s a wonderful aspect of the Mac – true application and data portability from machine to machine. It’s a shame that the Cube could only run Tiger.

Besides downloading optimized versions of some of my applications, running the computer at a lower color depth was helpful in speeding things up. Rather than displaying millions of colors on my screen, I elected to display only thousands of colors.

I hope my experience will provide some insight to others running slow computers and let everyone else appreciate their modern supercomputers. I’m glad to be back.

Macworld Expo 2008

I want two things from MacWorld:

  1. Mac OS X 10.5.2. I’m having a few problems with Leopard right now. It’s great, but Spaces has glitches and USB drives don’t eject as quickly as I’d like them to.
  2. A new ultra-portable MacBook. I don’t need a computer right now, but it would be nice to know that the future is shiny.

There are reports of a leaked Steve Jobs keynote flying around. If they’re true, I’m excited.

Mac OS X Leopard on a Power Mac G4 Cube

In July of 2000, Apple released the Power Mac G4 Cube, a powerful work of art. Originally running Mac OS 9, it held up well with iterations of OS X. In October of 2007, Apple released Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. Although one was created seven years after the other, I believe they were meant to be together. This weekend, I spent upwards of ten hours trying to get Leopard to run on a G4 Cube.

Continue reading ‘Mac OS X Leopard on a Power Mac G4 Cube’

Photo Booth

If you own a Macintosh, or have ever been in an Apple retail store, you’ve likely seen Photo Booth.app. It’s a small application that lets users take some quick pictures of themselves using the iSight camera that’s built into their Mac. The quality of the images isn’t wonderful; the application produces 640px by 480px fuzzy JPEGs. (Here’s an example image. Two external hard drives with a chemistry hipster PDA.)

I love the Mac for many reasons. The design is impeccable, the operating system is stable and feature-rich, and the developer community is strong. Despite all this, I think that Photo Booth has sold more Macs than any true merit of the platform. When I walk around an Apple retail store, I see kids playing with Photo Booth. When I’m browsing Facebook, I find images from Photo Booth.

Although I sound somewhat critical of Photo Booth, I use it daily. It turns my MacBook Pro into a sophisticated mirror. It’s remarkable that such a simple tool is now so pervasive.