Archive for the 'apple' Category

My list of MUST HAVE Macintosh applications.

Having just recently completely reformatted my laptop and upgraded the OS to 10.5 Leopard, I thought I’d share with you my list of must have applications. Generally over the course of time, my operating system fills up with all sorts of crappy little apps that I try but mostly never use. We all have a suite of tools that we go to on a regular basis, and starting from scratch with your OS is a really good way to clarify which applications and tools are the ones that you must have. So, here’s my list in pretty much the order that I downloaded them onto my computer brain.

All the prices listed below are in Australian Dollars priced on 11th February 2008 - prices may very due to the exchange rate at the time you buy, hence the (approx.) after most of the prices. I compiled this list for my bit on RRR FM’s computing and IT show Byte Into It. You will find a player with the show at the bottom of this post!

The Unarchiver - http://wakaba.c3.cx/s/apps/unarchiver.html
Cost: FREE

Multi format de-compression utility. Quick, fast and easy. Takes care of standard stuff like ZIP but also stuff rare to Macintosh like RAR.

1Password - http://1password.com/

Cost: $33 (approx.)

Full featured password management application. Automatically keeps track of any password and/or form you enter into your browser. Automatically fills forms based on an identity you enter - and you can have multiple identities. Also will automatically generate a strong password for you and keep track of all the passwords generated.

Little Snitch - http://www.obdev.at/products/littlesnitch/index.html
Cost: $28 (approx.)

Little Snitch is an application that works like a dynamic firewall. Basically, if an application tries to connect to something else on your network/internet the Snitch let you know by popping up a notification on the screen and ask you if you want to allow or deny. It also has a handy network monitor to show you which applications are talking to the ineternet, how often and how much. Essential!

Adium - http://www.adiumx.com/
Cost: FREE

Open source multi-messenger application. Supports: AOL IM (inc ICQ & dotMAC), Jabber (Google Talk & LiveJournal), MSN Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, MySpace IM, Gadu-Gadu, Novell Groupwise, QQ, Lotus Sametime. Well supported with help, updates and customizations/add-ons.

Skype - http://www.skype.com/
Cost: FREE

Ubiquitous multi-messenger and internet telephony application.

NetNewsWire - http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/NetNewsWire/
Cost: FREE

King of mac news readers. Once you get RSS/Newsfeeds you realize how much easier it is to collect info from the web. NetNewsWire is a full featured reader, with it’s own browser functionality, can download podcasts/vodcasts and feed them to iTunes, ability to take clippings and also save all your feeds and their read/unread status to the web for remote RSS access via the NewsGator service.

Mars Edit - http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/
Cost: $33 (approx.)

Great blogging tools - allows you to write and format blog content off-line and post directly to your feed. Also has facility for posting MP3’s and other content via your blog. Allows you to set categories and keywords. Also pings RSS search engines when you upload a new post. Integrates well with many blog formats such as WordPress, Drupal, Live Journal, Movable Type and so on.

Transmit - http://www.panic.com/transmit/
Cost: $33 (approx.)
This is a great FTP client. Fully featured with a great UI.

VLC - http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
Cost: FREE
This is a great additional media player for the macintosh (and other OS’s as well). This bad boy will play pretty much most media you throw at it - divx/avi’s, DVD’s, MP3’s, etc. If QuickTime won’t play it, VLC will (except for RealMedia, but no so many use that now anyhow…)

Growl - http://growl.info/
Cost: FREE

This is an on-screen notification application. Handy when an application you’re using is in the background as it makes sexy little windows pop up on screen to let you know when stuff happens - like people sending you a skype message, iTunes tracks at they start playing, when FTP uploads/downloads completed and many more.

Flip4Mac - http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/player/wmcomponents.mspx
COST: FREE
This is a set of system extensions that lets QuickTime play Wimdows Meida (WMV) files. Many sites like The Age newspaper and even RRR use Windows Media for streaming services - this way you won’t miss out on the action. Also there is a PRO version available if you want to make Windows Media content on the Macintosh.

Skitch - http://skitch.com/
COST: FREE
Skitch is a very sweet little application that is super-handy for doing fast image editing. A very simple user interface and a great demo movie make this even easier to use. Also has built in services for simply uploading your images to dotMAC, an FTP server of your choice and even Skitch themselves offer a free space for uploading! Also made by a company with local (Australian) talent!

AppZapper - http://appzapper.com/
COST: $15 (approx.)
When the time comes and you need to get rid of an application - AppZapper zaps ‘em. Neat, tidy and simple - this application gets rid of the main application and all associated files on your machine.

SuperDuper - http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
COST: FREE. Extended functionality: $31 (approx.)
This application is a great, simple and effective back-up tool. Lets you back up a BOOTABLE copy of your whole drive. Also lets you do many more tricky back-up scenarios with the extended functionality.

QuickTime Pro - http://www.apple.com/quicktime/pro/
COST: $45
QuickTime has a lot of stuff under the hood and the only way to get to it is to go Pro. Lets you do things like save embedded QuickTime content to your local drive. Also lets you export any QuickTime media to other QuickTime formats. Good for shrinking movies for the internet and other things like taking audio files out of QuickTime movies.

WIDGETS FOR DASHBOARD
Send SMS - http://www.smsmac.com/widget.php

FREE TO DOWNLOAD, BUT IT COSTS PER SMS TO SEND
A great widget for send SMS from your machine. Does cost for the messages, but is easier to set-up & use than free bluetooth alternatives. Also has Address Book integration for you stored contact and group SMS

iStat pro - http://www.apple.com/downloads/dashboard/status/istatpro.html
COST: FREE

Overview of what your computer is up to right now with things like drive space, network address, CPU temperature and many more.

ISP Usage Widget - http://lemonjar.com/?p=products.widgets
COST: FREE
Find out how many schmegabytes you’re schlepping back from them interwebs using these handy dandy widgets! Most big aussie ISP’s covered - Optus, iiNET, Internode, NetSpace, etc..

Logic Studio - The return of a competitive DAW market.

Apple recently announced the release of their new Logic Studio package. With this offering it would seem that Apple are laying down and firm and serious challenge to Digidesign’s apparent domination of the DAW market - something that many people have long expected. I haven’t been able to lay my hands on a copy as yet, but going off the Apple info, there is a lot to like about this package. In general terms I really hope that this release injects some much needed competition back into the pro-audio software market. This becomes particularly apparent when we compare the Logic Studio offering against Digidesign’s Pro-Tools LE suite.

On the face of it, much has been added to Logic which has been well overdue and which Pro-Tools has had from day 1. Sample accurate editing is essential in any serious DAW, and finally Apple has included this into Logic. Gone also is Logic’s messy old any-way-you-like-it interface. Apple appears to have tightened up the interface considerably. Gone are all the separate windows like the audio window (Hooray! I hated the audio window), hyper edit, mixer, and so on. Instead all of this same functionality is viewable via a single main window. Gone also is Logic’s configureable multi-window interface (this was a confusing and redundant nightmare). It looks as if making new tracks is a hell of a lot easier as well - making a new audio or MIDI track shouldn’t require creating several new objects over multiple pages as in previous versions. The mixing interface in Logic 8 has also been stripped back and sorted out. Generally is seems all the bad interface stuff that stopped me using Logic in a serious way 6 or 7 years ago appears to have gone.

Now, these interface changes in Logic are not really revelatory for us Pro-Tools users. It is right out of Pro-Tools 101 but here’s the thing - as well as getting some of this basic stuff right, Apple have also upped the stakes on several other key fronts.

Firstly right out of the box Logic 8 gives you up to 255 channels with 32 busses - this appears to be the case regardless of sample rate or bit depth, but I’m thinking that your storage hardware and CPU power will probably dictate exactly how much of this you can use. This is unlike Pro-Tools LE where you only get 24 tracks out of the box and have to pay additional to step that up to 48. Like wise the same thing goes for people who want to work with video. Logic 8 will allow you to import movies and import a variety of mixed media formats such as XML, AAF, OMF and OpenTL. It will also display timelines as timecode as well. Again if you’re looking for this functionality in Pro-Tools LE - you must pay extra, US$1,295.00 extra to be precise! In addition Logic 8 will allow you to mix in surround (up to 7.1) and comes with at least 16 plug-ins/effects that are true surround plug-ins. The Logic Studio suite also includes Compressor 3 which will allow you to encode your surround files to AC3 format for DVD authoring or burn uncompressed surround straight to DVD-A. While surround is common to Pro-Tools HD, you must pay extra for surround plug-ins and it comes without any software to encoding or authoring of surround material for DVD. If you are a Pro-Tool LE user, then you have no surround sound option at all!Unless of course you upgrade to a basic Pro-Tools HD rig for an extra ten grand or so…..

The Logic Studio suite contains a massive offering of additional software and content that does not come close to either Pro-Tool LE or HD. There is the Studio Instruments with 40 vintage, synth and sampled instruments. The Studio Effects package has 80 different effect plug-ins (no doubt all in Audio Unit format) which cover about most anything you would need to do - from EQ and compression through to delay, reverb, amplifier cabinet simulation and so on - there is even an impulse response reverb. Also included in these plug-ins is the industry standard ESX-24 sampler. The beauty of these plug-ins is that being in AU format you will be able to use them in other applications such as Abelton Live or even Final Cut. These Audio Units having been designed by Apple to run using the Core Audio services in OS X, you can be sure that these plug-ins will be very CPU efficient. You can expect that even on an entry level Intel-Mac laptop your plug-in count will be really very high. This is unlike Digidesign’s sluggish and flakey RTAS format used in LE and HD - which can only be used in Pro-Tools and nothing else. Digidesign do offer a small suite of rather bland RTAS plug-ins with Pro-Tools - the Digirack plug-ins. Digi also offer “Factory Bundles” (for which you again pay extra) but these bundles look like a complete joke compared to what you are now getting from Apple with Logic Studio. Digi also offer nothing as powerful as the ESX-24 with any of their free or packaged options (please don’t even try to talk up SampleTank LE that comes with PT LE - it’s a red nightmare). You can buy their Structure LE sampler, but it does not come close to the power of ESX-24.

The other thing to add here is that there is a vast developer community writing for the Audio Unit format, many of whom are offering there software free for download. Again - there simply is nothing like this in the Pro-Tools/RTAS community. We are still not done yet however - Logic Studio also includes the following sound file content:

  • 18,000 Apple Loops, including 12,000 loops from five Jam Pack collections
  • 5000 Foley, sound effects, and music beds, including over 1000 options in surround
  • 1300 EXS instruments, including 248 instruments from five Jam Pack collections
  • 400 channel strip settings and plug-in settings, for a wide range of high-quality sounds

You also get a copy of Waveburner for setting up and burning red-book CD’s as well. Gone as well is the old copy protection dongle (XS key) with only a serial number now required for authorization. This pretty much covers most of the important changes, however there is even more on offer from Apple, but I’ll let you go on over to Apple’s web-site for more info…

In terms of comparative functionality, the Logic Studio package will put you somewhere between Pro-Tools LE and HD. I’d say you’d generally be closer to HD than LE with what you can do using Logic Studio. Now, let’s compare dollars involved and see what we’re getting - and why Logic has got it all over Digidesign in terms of value for money.

Lets look at a comparison between a Digidesign based LE set-up that comes close to what you get with Logic Studio right out of the box.

This compares to:

So it’s getting close to being a 3rd of the cost of the equivalent Digi set-up. And I still think you can rightly argue that you are still getting more (both content and functionality) from the Logic Studio offering than what is on offer from Digidesign. You could even add Ableton Live to the Logic Studio list and you’d have yet more options and power for less than this basic Pro-Tools package. Plus, if you don’t need an audio interface, you can still use Logic Studio without one - just the minijack output on your laptop or the optical I/O on your Mac Pro and you’re good to go! Of course, you must have a Digidesign interface attached to even get Pro-Tools LE or HD to load.

All in all this great bundle from Apple should be a massive wake up call for Digidesign. While Digi may trot out the old, “We’re the industry standard.” routine it’s important to note that Logic is based on the old “industry standard” sequencer Notator, and in many ways the development curve of Logic has followed a generally similar path to that of Pro-Tools. Furthermore, for many people that are scoring for TV and film, Logic has for many years been the standard music writing tool, in preference to Pro-Tools relatively more recent attempts to offer itself as a music creation (rather than post-production) tool. You’d hope that we’ll see some really competitive and generous offers from Digidesign shortly. If not, this could mark the beginning of the end for Digidesign and Pro-Tools as the preeminent digital audio and music platform.

Fake Steve takes it to the bridge

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Fake Steve Jobs at his finest. This is the most succinct thing I’ve read on the music biz in ages.

The music industry nobs have finally figured out what we’re doing: “So you’ve no doubt seen this story or one like it explaining that Universal Music Group won’t renew its iTunes deal. And you’ve seen people saying that the majors are trying to ‘recalibrate’ their relationships with us. Actually what’s happening is they’re crapping in their pants. They woke up one day and realized that we’ve got 80% share of digital downloads. Suddenly all the power in the value chain resides in one player. Oops.

Here’s the thing. These guys could have done what we did. If you’ll recall, in the early days of the Internet, that’s what everyone figured was going to happen. The majors would build digital distribution arms. But they didn’t do it, because they didn’t understand technology, and they didn’t want to invest in building this expertise, and they were freaked out about piracy and paralyzed with fear. So we stepped in. We invested in people. We developed software that’s easy to use and works flawlessly. (And if you think that’s trivial, think again. It’s huge.) We promoted it, we marketed it, we haggled with all the majors and struck deals. We took all the risk. And yeah, now we’re reaping the reward. And guess what. The majors want a bigger slice. Um, for what? We did all the work. Ain’t gonna happen, slick.

Here’s the back story. The music companies are in a dying business, and they know it. Sure, they act all cool because they hang around with rock stars. But beneath all the glamour these guys are actually operating two very low-tech businesses. One is a form of loan-sharking: They put up money to make records, and then they force recording artists to pay the money back with exorbitant interest. The other business is distribution. They’ve got big warehouses and they control the shipment of little plastic boxes that happen to have music in them. We’ve seen what the Internet has done to brick-and-mortar retailers. Next to go are the brick-and-mortar warehouses. The guys running the labels are pretty stupid — most are just dirtbags who started out as band managers or promoters — but they’ve now figured this out, and they are fighting like cornered rats.

The labels are finally sort of vaguely getting clued in to the fact that in this value chain the power resides not with the creator of the product but with the distributor — and that by letting us make the online music store they’ve taken themselves out of the distribution business. In the world of digital, the distributor is Apple. We’re also the retailer. And the marketer. Another way to see this value chain: Think of the kids in China who make iPods. In the music industry value chain, the artists are the equivalent of those kids. And the labels are the equivalent of the Chinese companies that employ those kids. (Not a perfect analogy, I realize. But it’s kinda sorta how things are.)

In the days of vinyl and then CDs, the labels managed to hold on to a larger share of the power in the value chain by having loads of retailers in a highly fragmented market, and playing them off each other. In the digital world they’ve got us. And that’s it.

Ironically the mistake the major labels made was the same one that IBM made when it gave the DOS franchise to Microsoft nearly 30 years ago. They had a piece of work that they couldn’t do on their own or didn’t want to do on their own and they didn’t view it as critical or important so they outsourced it to a partner. (’Go make us an online music store.’) The partner turned that seemingly unimportant work into a way to accrue power and create a monopoly and control the industry. Today in the music business we’re about where IBM and Microsoft were in 1989, when IBM finally got hit with the clue stick and realized what Microsoft was doing.

How will it play out this time? I don’t know, honestly. But I like our chances.”

(Via The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs.)

I need surfaces

Crazy! Microsoft have impressed me.

My overall impression of MS is a company that has made a fortune out of follow the leader. You know, let the others take the risks of developing new and innovative products, wait and see how they go and if they are successful, tweak them enough to keep the majority of law suits at bay and then market them to our users using a combination of brute market force and disinformation.

But all that editorial opinion aside, this surface deal is way cool and looks slick and awesome. I can’t wait get my fingers over one and give it a whirl! It shows that a new interface age is upon us. I can’t wait until my studio is just a big multi-touch screen and a couple of speakers.

I guess what I’m expecting next is for Apple to come out and say, “Here’s a thin portable wireless multi-touch interface, that acts as the controller for any mac you have in the house, your Apple-TV, iTunes - whatever. You want to sit up in bed and read the paper on-line? You want to watch a movie streaming to your multi-touch tablet?”. Then they just have to say, it’s available now and you can buy it for $1,000 US or something. It’s probably not going to happen yet, but I’m sure we’re gonna see more and more of these products over the next 18-24 months.

My old buddy Tyson, who has been working for MS for a few years now posted a great movie up on his blog about this as well. Good old Jeff Han, the multi-touch daddy makes a few appearances.

fake steve

I was checking out some news feeds this arvo and came across a Web 2.0 deal at forbes.com for looking at a corporations exec structure. Anyhow, I thought I’d check out Apple and see how it was stacked. When I moused over Dr. Eric Schmidt’s entry, I got an interesting pop-up. I thought is was right up Fake Steve’s alley, so I sent it to him and he blogged it.

The internet is neat like that…