Hanni,
I'm also a long time PC user, and I just purchased a 12" Powerbook to
round out the technology suite in my office. I'm trying to make the
switch and use the Mac as my main machine, but I'm in the same boat as
you: what is the best software for the money?
Dave
Text Editor - Text Wrangler - Free
http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/index.shtml
Email - Thunderbird - Free
http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/
Web Browser - Firefox - Free
http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/
RSS Reader - NetNewswire - $24.95
http://ranchero.com/netnewswire/
Hope that helps.
Ken
Then some free ones:
Quicksilver
NetNewsWire Lite
Konfabulator (I'm on 10.3.9 so no Dashboard)
Text Wrangler
Acrobat Reader (normally use Preview though)
And the one you have to buy.
Office X (2004 is the current) Mainly for Word/Excel and Entourage
That's mostly what I use at home....though I dabble with anyting that
looks cool the list above are the ones I use most consistantly.
Plus I use the .Mac services.
Email: Apple's Mail. In Tiger they added smart folders, which was my
only remaining gripe.
Image, music manipulation: iTunes, iPhoto
IM: Adium
Web browsing: I have used Firefox and Camino. With Tiger I switched to
Safari, added Sogudi for the search keywords, and find it very nice,
particularly for the...
RSS reading: Safari. I really like its RSS reading mode, where you can
condense multiple feeds into a single screen.
Terminal: iTerm
Editing: XEmacs (http://members.shaw.ca/akochoi-xemacs/index.html), but
that only works if you are an Emacs person (there are also plain Emacs
mac ports). I also use SubEthaEdit, mostly for the joint-editing
feature, it's really amazing.
Blog posting: Ecto
Presentations: Keynote
Coding: XEmacs or Xcode, depending on what I'm programming
Nostalgia: Power64 (Commodore 64 emulator :-)
Utilities:
Quicksilver! I couldn't live without Quicksilver. Before that, I was
using Butler, which is also very nice.
Buddy Pop (quick access to AddressBook entries)
SSHKeyChain (manager ssh keys, tunnels, etc.)
Desktop Manager (virtual desktops)
Romeo (Bluetooth application control - useful for presentations)
Enjoy your new Mac!
--Diego
I know about the Notes feature in Keychain, but I don't really like it
very much. The interface window is so small and minimal and accessing
records requires that you enter your password for every record even if
the keychain is unlocked. I'm thinking about using it, but trying to
avoid it really. I'm actually wondering if I should just set up GPG
through gvim and go that route.
Here are two articles I found helpful when looking at OS X software:
My OS X software inventory:
http://bradchoate.com/weblog/2004/04/14/inventory
AskTog: Make your Mac a monster machine:
http://www.asktog.com/columns/060MonsterMac.html
To which I'll add:
Audio Hijack - great for capturing any audio stream on your mac to a
file (e.g. you can record streaming-only audio, capture the audio
tracks of video files, etc.)
Azureus - Great bittorrent client in Java
Captain FTP - best file transfer I've seen for OS X, but not free, so I
didn't shell out. I've been using CyberDuck, which handles my needs
well (SFTP) and is free.
Clutter - Organize your iTunes library with actual CD cases on your
desktop.
Delicious Library - Maybe the all-time coolest app for OS X - manage a
library of your books, CDs, and DVDs. You'll want to buy it even if you
don't need it.
Disk Inventory X - graphically shows what is taking up all your disk
space.
Software development - currently mostly using PHP and MySQL.
MySQL managers - I am currently comparing CocoaMySQL (free), Navicat
($99), dbVisualizer($99) I use Access on Windows heavily and am
looking for something as rapid and intuitive for OS X/MySQL - we'll
see...
For a progammer's editor TextWrangler works fine for me so far.
Amazingly feature-rich for a free program! I've also dabbled with
Eclipse - powerful, extensible, java-based, and free. Some people like
jEdit as well.
For HTML and site management I use Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004 -
among its many features are unique and superior tools for working with
CSS. Unfortunately, the OS X version is not as polished as the Windows
version (mostly interface quirks) - one of the very few times I
actually prefer the Windows version of an app.
Growl - notification framework
Fink - brings most UNIX software to your OS X Mac.
NoteTaker is an interesting notebook/outlining app - $69 I believe
I used LaunchBar which I thought was unbeatable until I discovered
QuickSilver...
I use Microsoft Remote Desktop Connection (free) to manage several
Windows servers from my PowerBook - it's very fast and seamless, a
better overall experience than VNC.
I use MenuMeters constantly to monitor at a glance network activity,
CPU and memory usage.
Saft is a supercharged enhancement for Safari that provides full-screen
mode, many more search-bar options, type-ahead page search (like
Firefox) and much more, so seamless you don't even realize it's an
add-in. I think it's $6.
Ecto is a great blog-posting tool, Gallery Remote for uploading pics to
my website, Toast Titanium for burning CDs and DVDs, Cocktail is nice
for automating housecleaning and maintenance.
I also use Apple Mail, iCal, iTunes, iPhoto, GarageBand.
Briefly on hardware:
I was given an iPod photo as a birthday present, and of course it plays
well with the PowerBook, as well as being a nice 60GB external drive
for backups and such.
I use a Sony Ericsson T616 bluetooth phone which works great with the
PowerBook and iSync - a $10 sharweware called Salling Clicker lets you
use the phone as a remote control for the PowerBook: control PowerPoint
or Keynote presentations (and see the slide notes on the phone
screen!), works as a remote for iTunes and DVD Player, automatically
pausing when a call comes in, displays the incoming phone # in large
type on-screen, etc.
Enjoy your PowerBook, an amazing machine that will make you more
productive and give you a lot of fun as well!
<http://wiki.43folders.com/index.php/OS_X_Inventories>
But, to quickly summarize here, there's are the "always running"
applications that *are not* made by the fruit:
Path Finder: File browser that I'd like to think is pretty great.* :)
<http://www.cocoatech.com/pf.php>
* Disclosure: I help the company that makes Path Finder with design and
marketing
Spell Catcher: System-wide spell checking, thesaurus, shorthand text
expansions, and tons more
<http://www.rainmakerinc.com/>
NetNewsWire: The Mother of all newsreaders
<http://www.ranchero.com/netnewswire/>
DevonThink Pro: powerful freeform database for, er, stuff
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink/>
WeatherMenu : weather in the menubar
<http://www.afterten.com/products/weathermenu/>
MenuCalendarClock: really nice menu-based calendar / clock
<http://www.objectpark.net/mcc.html>
And check out my OS X software inventory page (a bit outdated, but
still valid) for more:
<http://www.beatnikpad.com/archives/2004/04/25/mac_os_x_software_inventory>
Switcher tips:
- In terminal: Cmd-A to go to start of line, Cmd-E to go to end of
line. Didn't find any way to scroll between words on a single line
yet...
- System Preferences > Keyboard Shorcuts to know what are the very
complicated shortcuts to take screenshots.
- Do NOT overwrite a directory thinking the files from the old
directory and the new directory will be merged as in Windows!!!
/folder1/patate/something
/folder2/patate/other
If you Cmd-C /folder2/patate in Finder, and Cmd-V it in /folder1, and
answer yes when it ask you if you want to overwrite, you'll end up with
only' other' in /folder1/patate, not both something and other like ou
would in Windows.
That's something you really need to keep in mind if you do a lot of
file / dir moving.
- Cmd= Apple key
- Cmd-Right (or Ctrl-Right) arrow = go to end of line
Cmd-Left (or Ctrl-Left) arrow = go to start of line
Option-Right arrow (Option = Alt key, also called the modifier key) =
skip one work to the right
Option-Left arrow = skip one work to the left
Shift to select, like in Windows.... So Shift-Alt-Left will select the
word to the left of your cursor.
- Home, End, PgUp & PgDn will scroll the document, but won't move the
cursor. You need to click with the mouse once you found the place you
want it to be.
There's probably others, but that's all that come to mind atm.
IM:
I don't. :-O
Browsing:
Camino, otherwise Firefox. Firefox is more full-featured currently.
Text Editing:
vim (an enhanced vi clone) - of course :-)
Terminal:
iTerm + screen
RSS:
NetNewsWire
Audio:
iTunes, Audacity, Wiretap Pro
Launcher:
LaunchBar (NOT QuickSilver :P )
Email:
Thunderbird
Mindmapping:
Novamind
Word processing/office:
NeoOffice/J, AppleWorks[1], Abiword, Lyx - okay, okay,
so I haven't picked one - but they're all free or
included... I lean towards NeoOffice for heavy jobs and
Abiword for lighter (every day) ones...
VNC:
OSXVNC (server side); VNCThing (mostly) - (client)
Contact Manger/Calendar:
Now Up-to-Date
System Status:
iPulse
Cache:
SquidMan (includes Squid) [2]
Timer:
Miniteur (fantastic!!)
Information Container:
Stickybrain
Contribution to Society:
Folding@Home
That should be enough, right? One thing - I tend to avoid software
that REQUIRES MacOS X 10.3 or 10.4 - since I still have a MacOS X 10.2
machine, but also as a matter of principle. I'm a strong believer in
making things work in the most systems possible - portability! Why
should one be shut out for using a program that was current only two
years ago? Grrr....
To find many of these, I would go to
http://www.versiontracker.com/macosx/ and search for them. Also scan
through the Freeware column for other freeware.
[1] I can't think of it as AppleWorks (gak!) - AppleWorks was
the Apple II office suite (nice one, too, for its time)
[2] I don't go anywhere without a cache - its browser independent,
shareable within a network, and speeds up access. It can be
ESPECIALLY useful if you utilize high-speed connections first,
then use dial-up later...