Thursday 22 February 2007

Open Office for Mac

Another high profile piece of Open Source software that I've been looking into recently is Open Office. At the moment there is no native version that runs in OS X, however there is a version that will run in X11. This is not ideal as there are some glitches that can occur, probably because it's not running natively. This is however, an option if you are unable to afford the iwork package or Microsoft's office for Mac.
I'm checking the Open Office site regularly now awaiting the alpha test version. As soon as I have my hands on this I will post again with some more feedback.

Thursday 15 February 2007

Adium




"Adium is a free instant messaging application for Mac OS X that can connect to AIM, MSN, Jabber, Yahoo, and more."
I was fed up with having to have ichat and MSN messenger open at the same time and having to switch between the two windows when I was chatting to more than one person. I decided to see if there was an open source solution, and I'm very glad I did. Adium runs flawlessly, looks beautiful and keeps all of my contacts in the same place. Other great features include tabbed chat windows and some really sweet sounds for when people log in and out. I advice anyone who has had the same problem with MSN and ichat to check it out - adiumx.com

Sunday 11 February 2007

Path Finder




I thought the first post to this blog should be one of my personal favorite pieces of Open Source software for the mac, Path Finder. Basically this is a finder replacement. It has many of the features which I know some mac users have been crying out for, and some of which I know they are going to implement in the version of finder that is coming out with Leopard, e.g. tabbed finder windows. This software has so much more though as it can be customized for each individual user very easily. I had heard a lot of rave reviews of Path Finder before I actually demoed it, but once I had demoed it, I immediately purchased it (a mere US$34.95 which is about 17 pounds in the UK) and never looked back. I also found that I don't really use my dock anymore. Probably the best way to explain why I prefer Path Finder to finder is to list my personal top five features;

1. Apart from tabbed browsing, which anyone who has every used Firefox will know is a huge time saver, Path Finder has a feature called the 'Drop Stack' which is extremely useful when moving files around. It's a small pane where you can drag any number of files into a 'stack', then drag them back out into another tab. This eliminates the need to have more than one Path Finder window open, ever.

2. Path Finder has a built in terminal pane. This means I can quickly type in and execute any shell scripts with minimum fuss.

3. Path Finder has a built in text editor. You can also create new text and HTML files from inside of Path Finder.

4. Built in image viewer that also views PDFs. This eliminates the need to have Apples preview open or Adobe Acrobat.

5. The search facility in Path Finder is so much more powerful than spotlight. It enables you to hone your search a lot more and also add in if statements.

Try Path Finder out for yourself here - Cocoatech.com

Thursday 1 February 2007

Open Source software for Mac OS X

Welcome to the Open Source blog for Macintosh computers. I wanted to set this blog up as somewhere that mac users could come and discuss open source software specifically for Apple computers. I started using macs exclusively a little over a year ago now, but I was interested in the idea of Open Source and the free software movement some time before that. I must also state that I'm not a developer, I am just a user of this software. I do get involved in submitting bugs from time to time and I would like to get into the development side of open source, once I have the time to teach myself how to do it.
If you are new to Open Source and would like to know more then please follow the links on the left.