A free utility app that adds functionality to the Magic Mouse, allowing you to set actions for clicks and taps based on how many fingertips are on the mouse’s surface. MagicPrefs also allows you to adjust the tracking speed and tap sensitivity. No support for “pinching” yet, but it looks like it’s in the to-do list. Basically, this is the solution to my problem with the Magic Mouse.
Web.AppStorm Giveaway: CrashPlan →
Speaking of online backups: Chris Bowler on Web.AppStorm is giving away four one-year subscriptions to CrashPlan today.
Backing Up Over Broadband →
Khoi’s dilemma with finding an online backup solution for his 400GB of data. There’s some good discussion in the comments with many recommendations for DropBox, Backblaze, or Jungle Disk.
My approach for backing up is to keep it simple, and keep it safe. At my home I’ve got a TimeCapsule/TimeMachine backup, and run a nightly SuperDuper clone to an external. At my work office I’ve got another external that I clone weekly.
Having an off-site or online backup is important because, as Khoi says: “Fire or theft would leave me as helpless as any less-conscientious computer user, rendering all my self-congratulatory local backups worthless.”
What to Get for That Nerdy, Design-Savvy, Coffee-Loving, Snowboarding, Person in Your Life
Nerds are hard to shop for. We know precisely what we want, but we’re curiously passive about letting you know. Instead, we want you to know what we want without us having to say anything. Furthermore, the trick to being a great gift giver is to get someone the thing that they didn’t even know they wanted until they open it. Therefore, you’ll find below a list of gadgets, trinkets, and power tools.1
Except for that iPhone dock you see below, and the classic thermos, I own and use everything on this list. Each of these are great gifts, and I’d be proud to give any one of them to my other nerdy, design-savvy, coffee-loving, snowboarding friends or family members.
Nerdy
- Wooden Log iPhone Docking Station: $68
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Twelve South BookArc: $50
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Star Trek (2009 DVD): $21
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Media Temple Web Hosting: $100
Design-Savvy
- Pilot 0.40mm Gel Pen: $16 / dozen
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Gotham Typeface: $199
Coffee-Loving
- Chemex Coffee Maker and Filters: $50
Snowboarding
- Ride Concept Snowboard: $750
Miscellaneous Stocking Stuffers
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J Crew Magic Wallet: $22
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J Crew Argyle Socks: $15
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Ticket to Ride: $38
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WoodWick Candle: $15
- This list may also come in handy if you end up getting one of those Snuggie blankets with sleeves and after you’ve returned it don’t know where to spend the money. ↵
Whistler Got Over 18 Feet of Snow in November →
Wow. Really, really wish I was there. Snowboarding.
Orbital [iTunes Link] →
Thanks to Marco, this is currently my favorite iPhone game. It costs a buck and has rich graphics and a simple, addictive gameplay. There is also a free version available, though it doesn’t include “Pure Mode” which, in Marco’s and my opinion, is definitely worth the dollar.
Reader’s Setup: Adrian Hanft
Adrian is the creator of Font Burner, a site that hosts 1,000+ sIFR fonts. He also maintains Found Photography, a site where he documents his camera experiments (like building cameras out of Legos) and photography. He is also on Twitter. By day he is creative director for Red Rocket Media Group in Colorado.
ADRIAN’S SETUP:
1. WHAT DOES YOUR Desk LOOK LIKE?
One is my setup at work, the other is at home.
2. WHAT IS YOUR CURRENT MAC SETUP?
At home I use a 17″ MacBook Pro which is almost always connected to my Sennheiser headphones. For digital photography I love my Panasonic Lumix LX3 with an Eye-Fi card that sends photos to my computer wirelessly. I just bought a 500gb external Western Digital drive that is powered by Firewire 800. As you can see, my home setup also includes a ping-pong table and a cat. At work I am on a Mac Pro (2x Dual Core 2.66Ghz). Possibly the most important technology in my toolbox is a sketchbook.
3. WHY ARE YOU USING THIS SETUP?
I try to never be too far from objects that keep my mind at play. You can see the toys above my desk at work, the wall of artwork at home, the headphones, and the ping pong table. I try to balance the utmost simplicity in my work space without losing the inspiration that I find from posters, artwork, toys, and games.
4. WHAT SOFTWARE DO YOU USE ON A DAILY BASIS, AND FOR WHAT DO YOU USE IT?
- I use TextMate, Transmit, and CSSEdit for web development
- There aren’t many days when I don’t open Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign
- Adium for instant messaging
- Google Search Box recently replaced QuickSilver for shortcuts
- Fever for RSS feeds
- MarsEdit for blogging on all my WordPress powered sites
- Transmission is typically going in the background
5. DO YOU OWN ANY OTHER MAC GEAR?
I have an iPhone and an aging PowerMac G4. I still use an old 3rd Generation iPod for audio books on my commute. The internet reaches me through my Airport Express Base Station.
6. DO YOU HAVE ANY FUTURE UPGRADES PLANNED?
I am holding my breath for the rumored Mac netbook. If that doesn’t come into existence I might just try installing OSX on a netbook to create a hackintosh. I have to resist the urge to upgrade constantly. I would love a new unibody MacBook Pro and an iPhone upgrade, but realistically those purchases are at least a year away. I have had my eye on a 30″ Apple Cinema display for a while.
More Sweet Setups
Adrian’s setup is just one in a series of sweet Mac Setups.
Loren Brichter on The Setup →
Loren:
I want a 3GS with the original aluminum enclosure.
Ditto.
Magic Mouse Miscellany
Last month I got a Magic Mouse. I would have bought a wired one if I could have because in all my experience with various wireless Apple mice the sensor-to-pointer communication has been poor and always made for rigid mousing.
Thankfully, the Magic Mouse works just as good as any wireless mouse I’ve used. So I’m keeping it, and now I’ve got a Magic Mouse at home. At work I’ve still got a Mighty Mouse, though.
It took about a week to get used to holding the Magic Mouse. It is a lot thinner than the Mighty Mouse, and therefore has to be held differently. Also, it’s constructed so much finer than its predecessor that my Mighty Mouse at work now feels like a cheap, overfed rodent.
But despite being fat, what I still love about my Mighty Mouse is that third button. Clicking on the scroll ball can activate different events. For me it’s Exposé, and it’s incredibly convenient when working a lot with the mouse.
Despite missing this third button, what I love about the Magic Mouse it’s ability to scroll with momentum. Just like on the iPhone, you can flick when scrolling a page, and it won’t come to a dead stop the very instant you stop scrolling but will instead slowly come to a halt.
Scrolling with momentum has quickly become addictive, and it now drives me bonkers to use my laptop trackpad because it doesn’t scroll like the Magic Mouse scrolls.1
- Smart Scroll is a $20 system-wide utility that attempts to mimic Apple’s momentum scrolling feature of the Magic Mouse and iPhone.
However, with Smart Scroll you don’t flick, you “coast”. Which means the window will keep scrolling after you’re done moving your fingers on the trackpad even if you’re fingers are still on the trackpad. Not only does this break the law of physics, it also means you are always “smart scrolling” even when you don’t want to be. ↵
Airbag Wallpaper →
This has consistently been one of my favorite desktop wallpapers, and it popped up this morning as today’s random background picture. (There’s an iPhone Version, too.)
Building a New Desk Is So Much More Fun (And Inexpensive) Than Buying One
The opportunity to build a new cave does not come along very often. Next month I’m moving into a new office at work, and so what better time to build a new desk?
Using a miter saw, a power drill, and a measuring tape I’ve spent the past three weekends crafting a 2-piece, 21-square-foot desk.
There are two desks, built to sit perpendicular to one another, forming an L-shaped Master Desk. The larger desk is 6-feed wide and 30-inches deep. The smaller is 4-feet wide and 20-inches deep. Put together, they crank out more than 21 total square feet.
The tops are three-quarter-inch-thick pine, and the legs are 4×4 cedar. Each desk stands 28.75 inches tall.
And as I write this, the fifth and final coat of polyurethane is drying in my living room…
“The Season of Stuff” →
Patrick’s advice for the Holidays is actually advice for life:
The point is, control the stuff. Don’t let the stuff control you.
Reader’s Setup: Justin Pennington
Justin Pennington is the IT Director at a wholesale distributor headquartered in the Midwestern USA. He spends a good majority of his time developing internal web applications, though he also manages every piece of tech and software at the company. Justin is 23 and happily married to his wife, Kim.
Justin’s Setup
1. What does your desk look like?
2. What is your current mac setup?
There are three different setups pictured … work, home, and a second desk at home.
My work setup has a Dual Quad-Core Nehalem Mac Pro with three 24″ Dell G2410 monitors, 12GB of RAM, 1.28TB internal disk space, 1.5TB external disk space (backup), Bose Companion 2 Speakers, Bose Quiet Comfort 3 headphones, a Logitech MX 1100 mouse, and a Fujitsu S500 document scanner.
The main home desk holds my 15″ unibody MacBook Pro (when I’m at home that is) and a 20″ Apple Cinema Display. The second desk has a 20″ white Intel iMac with three G-tech external hard drives (totaling 1.57TB), a Logitech DiNovo Edge keyboard, a Logitech MX Revolution Mouse, Bose Companion 5 speakers, and a 32″ Samsung TV connected to it for Hulu, movies, etc.
3. Why are you using this setup?
My work setup is about two months old at the time of writing. It was a gift from my boss for my two year-anniversary at this company. I develop web applications to extend our windows only ERP which means I need a Windows XP virtual machine running the ERP client and SQL Management Studio and a Server 2003 virtual machine running development databases. The screens are perfect for me as I’m most concerned with resolution and not accurate color.
My home setup is used for those late-night coding sessions to meet a deadline and some freelance projects. The desk with the cinema display is perfect for me as I prefer to work from my laptop at home and it allows me to just plug in and get the benefits of a desktop without having to transfer files over, get MAMP going, etc. The second desk is used mainly just to keep iTunes up all the time (see other Mac gear section for an explanation) and occasionally for my wife or I just to get on the internet real quick when our laptops are downstairs or in the car. She will usually use whatever desk I’m not at if she is on the computer while I’m in there (thus the reason for two desks instead of one big one).
4. What software do you use on a daily basis, and for what do you use it?
- Dropbox – This made the top of the list because it is the best syncing utility on the market. Changes to your files are instantly synchronized across all of your connected computers on any platform (Mac, Linux, or Windows). This is critical for anyone with multiple computers. It is free for up to 2GB or $100/year for 50GB. (I’m not affiliated with them, just love their service)
- Evernote – This is similar to Dropbox, but for notes. It instantly syncs across computers and handhelds. I can take notes in a meeting on my laptop and then just close my laptop and they are instantly available on my desktop when I get back to my office.
- Mail – This is pretty self explanatory. I used to have the GrowlMail extension for this but it broke with Snow Leopard and I haven’t checked for an update since.
- iTunes – I listen to music throughout the day, some on Sirius some from my library.
- Safari – This is my web-browser of choice for everything but the initial testing of web applications I develop.
- Firefox (w/ Firebug & Web Developer) – Firebug is a fantastic javascript debugger, and web developer allows you to see the HTML generated after the page load (injected with AJAX, etc.). I use Prism for the web-app platform for my users so I test early versions of the web-apps in Firefox (prism is based off firefox) so that I can be sure I have a working version first and then take care of the cross browser idiosyncrasies that pop up later.
- Adium – Connected to my internal Jabber server, AIM, and MSN. To be honest though, lately I have been using iChat for AIM as file transfers seem more reliable in it and I haven’t taken the time to figure out what is wrong with Adium.
- Things – This is the best task manager I have yet to find. It has WiFi syncing with iPhone and I sync the database up over Dropbox. The latter isn’t perfect but as long as I remember to only have one copy open at a time it works great (which is fine for me as I typically only need Things on my laptop when out of town).
- Textmate – Best editor out there, hands down. I used to use Coda but recently switched to Textmate, CSSEdit, and Firefox/Firebug after I realized I was just using code/css editor in Coda and everything else outside of it.
- CSSEdit – My favorite CSS editor.
- Parallels – I have to run XP and Server 2003 and after several VMware / Parallels comparisons Parallels came out on top.
- Apple Remote Desktop – It is a little more versatile than the basic screen sharing tool plus allows me to add normal VNC clients to the list.
- Microsoft Remote Desktop – Used for server administration, all the servers at my primary job run Windows so this is critical.
- Toast – Burning CDs and DVDs, however I don’t do too much of this anymore. The only time is to give a copy of a finished product to someone or to burn a lot of data that would be too large to efficiently send over the internet (15GB+).
- Transmission – Favorite BT client.
- Transmit – Favorite FTP client, offers MobileMe sync which is pretty convenient.
- Visual Hub – They stopped development on this program and it will eventually become obsolete but it is still the best media convertor in my opinion.
- VLC – Plays just about anything you throw at it.
- Tweetie – My favorite Twitter app.
- Terminal – Doing normal linux server administration stuff for freelance projects.
- Pages – Better than MS Word.
- Excel – Better than Numbers.
- Fireworks / Photoshop – I switch between the two for image editing and layouts.
- Pulsar – Excellent Sirius/XM internet radio tool. The web version at sirius.com (aside from having Snow Leopard problems) would prompt for a password each time, ask every hour if I was still listening, and had a very outdated interface. Pulsar is perfect, click the station, it plays, and that’s it (that is all it should do).
- Balsamiq Mockups – I use this for quick web-app and web-site mockups. It has a lot of great built-in shapes and the sketch looking results promotes people to make changes in the initial design meeting (vs. 90% through development or during implementation).
- Teleport – Great mac port/frontend of Synergy (and updated for Snow Leopard) that allows me to use one mouse/keyboard for multiple macs. This is most beneficial with my laptop on my desk, I can just move the mouse from the desktop to the laptop like it was just another monitor.
- Fever – This is fantastic, self-hosted RSS aggregator that I actually found out about from another setup on this site. I use Fluid to keep this as a separate application in my dock.
- Adobe ConnectNow – This is a great tool for online meeting. I checked out other alternatives like DimDim but found that ConnectNow was the easier for the participants and myself.
5. Do you own any other Mac gear?
My wife and I both have iPhones, her’s a 3G and mine a 3G S. Also, my wife has a 13″ unibody MacBook.
I have a 1TB Time Capsule for wireless backups. The Time Capsule and Airport Extremes are fantastic wireless routers as they have dual band G and N plus guest networking built in. They lack some of the options and flexibility offered by some others but when I’m at home the last thing I want to worry is tweaking a router for QoS, etc. … I spend enough time doing that at work.
We have four Airport Expresses and two Apple TVs that I have picked up over the years. The Airport Expresses are solely used for airtunes (and one as a bridge for a wired printer). With Apple’s remote iPhone app we can be in any room and play any music from the iMac library (which is why it is always on) to any main room in the house (living room, kitchen, my room (office), wife’s room (scrapbooking), or master bedroom) with the flick of a finger.
6. Do you have any future upgrades planned?
I would like to get a 24″ LED Cinema Display to replace the 20″ Cinema display at home. That being said it isn’t a priority since I try not to work too much from home and I already have the 20″.
I would like to get a Macbook Air again. I bought the first generation one on launch day and it was so horrifically slow for what I did it just sat around until I eventually sold it. I have read the new model is significantly better and want to try it out again. My job entails that I always have a computer with me when I travel (granted, I wouldn’t travel without a computer anyway) and sometimes the MacBook Pro is a bit of a bear to lug around when the only thing I plan on using it for is to check email and post some pictures. If Apple releases a tablet I will certainly get one of those.
I’d really like to pick up a pair of the Dr. Dre Beats (studio) headphones, they sound fantastic. I need to find out if they have a rechargeable battery though. My Bose ones do and there is no worse feeling than getting a dead battery mid-day because I forgot to charge them all week. I would gladly go through a AAA every week or two not to have to worry about recharging the battery every couple days (and not having to bring the recharger with me when I travel).
More Sweet Setups
Justin’s setup is just one in a series of sweet Mac Setups.
A Simple Business Model →
Matt at 37 Signals:
When you choose that path, you get clarity. Everything is simpler. It’s simpler to explain your product. It’s simpler for people to understand. It’s simpler to change it. It’s simpler to maintain it. It’s simpler to start using it. The ingredients are simpler. The packaging is simpler. Supporting it is simpler. The manual is simpler. Figuring out your message is simpler. And most importantly, succeeding is simpler.