Adobe was kind enough to ship out not one, but two copies of the new Creative Suite 3, which arrived today. The two copies are the Web Premium and the Design Premium. I have decided to install the Web Premium on my Macbook Pro, while the Design Premium will go on the PowerMac G5.
Today is Day One – Install on the Macbook Pro.
The easiest thing in the world is installing a program on a Macintosh. It is either drag and drop, or running an installer program. In the case of CS3, it runs an installer program. And not the (sometimes) great Apple installer, but one created by Adobe. It looks very much like a PC installation application, very unMac-like.
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Maquarium 2.3.3
everyday software
Price: $24.00
http://www.everydaysoftware.net
Modern fishkeeping is a lot more complicated than putting a couple of goldfish into a bowl and hoping for the best. Even casual aquarists will spend hundreds of dollars on the livestock and hardware, and advanced hobbyists keeping marine fishes and corals will spend many times that. Maquarium is an integrated set of tools that allows aquarists to log water chemistry and quality tests, schedule maintenance events, download and record information, and perform a variety of useful calculations. Of course, almost all of the features that Maquarium totes could be done with other applications, and arguably in some cases better and with more flexibility, but what Maquarium does provide is a neat interface and true ease of use.
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Dock Extender
SendStation
Price: $28.95
www.sendstation.com
Back in May of 2006 I blogged about wanting a product that would allow you to connect adapters to your iPod without having to remove the case. Well, if you are like me, and have been asking for a similar product, SendStation has finally come to the rescue with the Dock Extender.
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Many people use Apple’s iSync every day. I am not one of them. I thought it was pretty cool when it came out. Finally, I could sync all my personal data between my work and home Macs, Palm handheld, and iPod! For me, it just didn’t work as advertised, especially between the Palm and Mac. Some phone numbers and email addresses were duplicated, some disappeared! Even with my iPod, iSync was telling me changes were made on the iPod and would overwrite what was on my Mac! I followed every piece of advice I could find from Apple and other sources, but I just couldn’t tolerate data loss. It took me a couple days to get everything back in order. Most of my calendar was in triplicate. My contacts had tons of duplicate and missing phone numbers and email addresses. I had to reconfigure Palm Desktop to the way it was originally. It was a mess. I haven’t tried it again since.
Before iSync, I simply synced my Palm and iBook with Palm Desktop. Since I brought my work iBook home with me every day, I had no need for an up to date Address Book on my home iMac and I didn’t care if that stuff was on my iPod. That all changed when the iBook was replaced with a Power Mac G4. Now I needed my contacts at home. I had to figure out some simple steps to make sure I was able to do what iSync was not. After some research, I came up with what has been an excellent iSync substitute for me: the Finder, with a little help from Palm Desktop.
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iTrip nano
Company: Griffin Technology
Price: $49.99
griffintechnology.com
Griffin has been in the iPod FM transmitter game for many years. As the iPod evolves, so does the iTrip. Griffin has evolved the iTrip once again with the iTrip nano.
The iTrip nano is designed to fit the 2nd generation Nanos. The Nano slides on the iTrip and connects to a dock connector and a headphone connector. The unit is extremely light, so minimal weight is added to the iPod when connected. While the iPod is easy to connect, it is not easy to remove from the iTrip. The fit is tight, and removing it is a little awkward. I was always worried that I would snap off the headphone connector while I wiggled the iPod to remove it.
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BurnAgain DVD
freeridecoding
Price: $24.50 ($14.50 upgrade from BurnAgain)
http://www.freeridecoding.com
I have a friend who is always asking me if he can burn a CD or DVD with files and then add to it at a later date. I have never been sure of an answer for him, until I tried BurnAgain DVD. BurnAgain DVD allows you to do just that, and it works great.
BurnAgain DVD actually replaces a program called BurnAgain, adding DVD+RW compatibility. It also works with CDR and CDRW discs. Support for other formats is in development.
The program could not be any easier to use. The simple interface below opens and you drag and drop the items you want to burn to the disc. Click “Burn” and you are good to go.
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