I’ve had some time to get used to using Mac OS X, both at work and at home. I’ve also had a great deal of exposure to a multitude of programs (mostly free) that are available on Mac. I’m going to have a geek moment here and highlight my top 5. Most of you already use a lot of these. But none of you use #1, which confuses me. Anyway, on to the show.
5. PandoraJam (Link) — Music player.
If you’re as much of a music lover as I am, you’ve probably already been introduced to pandora.com . Here you can input an artist that you like, and they will go out and find other artists and music that have similar musical qualities, and play the songs for you (did I mention, for free?). Anyway, PandoraJam is a magnificent mac-only interface for playing and recording… yeah, recording music from PandoraJam. The trial is free and never ends, and the only drawback is every now and then you have to click the “Demo” button again and start recording. But seriously, pay for it. This developer did a great job.
4. VLC (Link) — Media (everything) Player
Disclaimer: This isn’t a mac-only product. It’s actually completely cross platform compatible. But I do run it on OS X, and it’s completely wonderful. VLC is a video/music/media/whatever player. And when I say “whatever,” I really mean everything. I’ve never come across a media player so versatile. It has a ton of built in codecs and features that make it pretty much top of the line. Other things that make it good: It’s free, it’s light-weight, the interface is small and simple. Oh, and ever have a video where the audio and video was off? Yeah, it has settings to adjust that too.
3. Adium (Link) — Instant Messaging
iChat video is cool and all, but Adium is hands-down the best instant messaging program I’ve used, on any system, ever. With plug-ins galore, this program can pretty much look and do whatever you want it to. It has support for pretty much every chat client out there (except IRC, but who cares), and is so customizable. Did I mention you could customize it like crazy? Yeah. You should do that. It’s worth it.
2. TextMate (Link) — Text Editor
Okay, this is where I lose some of you. TextMate is a text editor. That’s it. …. WAIT! Actually it’s a lot more than a text editor. It uses these packages called “Bundles,” which there are hundreds of, to support programming and text manipulation. You can download a bundle for just about every programming language out there, and it ships with several dozen. I use this for pretty much all of my text editing. Okay, developer hat is coming back off for #1.
1. Quicksilver (Link, Download) — Perfection.
What is it? What would you like it to be? Okay, that’s what it is. Quicksilver can be summed up by the caption on it’s website: ” A unified, extensible interface for working with applications, contacts, music, and other data.” Personally, I use this program to quickly open programs, operate iTunes, write emails, add items to my to-do list for work, open web pages… I’ll stop there, but there are tons more. Basically, you assign a hotkey for quicksilver (I use Alt+space, it’s easy to hit), it pops open a window no matter where you are, you begin typing what you want to do (program name, artist, url, etc etc etc), and it will search it’s catalogue for applications and activities that match what you’re typing. It’s incredibly simple and easy to use, and there are plug-ins for pretty much everything (have you figured out that I like customization yet?). If you do download this, make sure you slowly work your way through the preferences and plug-ins list to get the perfect setup for you. Read the documentation linked in the title. It’s important. Don’t skip it or skim through it. Seriously.
So that’ s it. Some of those I know most of you will never use, nor do you really need to. But #1 is definitely worth checking out, even if it takes some time to setup just right for you (don’t skip it!). Anyway, have a nice weekend.