The MacCast

The HitchHiker’s Guide to the Macintosh: Part 1

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Editorial

A Brief and Warped History of the Mac, part 1(in which the Mac doesn’t appear).

Welcome to the first column in my series. I would at this point like to tell you what the column is going to be about but sadly I can’t really at the moment. I did ask Adam for some guidance on topic, but he said he’d leave it up to me – which was probably a big mistake.

All I can tell you is that this column is not going to be useful. However it may be interesting, informative and occasionally controversial – though if it is please don’t send too much abuse my way.

One thing I have always found incredibly interesting about the Mac is not just how it is now, but also how we got here. Apple have revolutionised the world of computers time and time again in terms of software and hardware. Not ambitious enough for them, they’ve now revolutionised the whole music industry.

The History of the Apple company is probably well documented in scraps around the internet and several other ‘brief history’ guides out there – most of which are better written. But here is my take on the whole sordid affair – serialised over 6 parts.
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MacCast 06.01.2005

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Podcast

Listen to today’s show here! podcast-mini2.gif
MC20050601.mp3 [12.7mb 27:48 64kbps]

A podcast about Macs done by a Mac geek for Mac geeks. Show 64. Apple releases QuickTime 7.0.1, Mac OS 10.4.2 released to developers, new iPod Photo update coming soon, AOpen’s “Pandora’s” box Mac Mini clone, Apple launching “The Studio” in more retail store and Microsoft plays follow the leader, again. Migrating from Adobe Photo Album/Elements to iPhoto, recommendation for a USB KVM Switch. Get an iPed Discount from Thought-out.biz. My decision on advertising in the show and how to support the show without advertising. New music, The Longer Goodbye by Six of One. For whom the bell tolls. Shownotes: HTML or OPML

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Log in and be counted!

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Podcast

It’s that time of month again. Please remember to head over to PodcastAlley and vote for all of your favorite Podcasts. Since we have the NBCs, ABCs and ClearChannels coming to the party and spewing out repurposed content as Podcasts it is even more important we send a message. Step up, be counted and let everyone know what content you prefer to have in your ears. And FYI, it’s ok if you like the repurposed stuff, vote for that too if you want, I won’t tell. ;)

Vote at Podcastallley.com

The Clone Wars Rage On

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: News

SuperTangentSo remember, Luxpro? Yes, they are the company from Taiwan who ripped off the design of the iPod Shuffle and showed it off at CeBit along with matching iPod advertising, also stolen. Apple’s lawyers were hot on the case and within a day all offending materials and images were removed. Well seems Luxpro has a deathwish, becasue they are back with a slightly (and I mean VERY slightly) modified design. Units are now available and showing up on eBay for about $100 USD. They changed the name to the SuperTangent and it adds some additional features not found on the iPod Shuffle. The SuperTangent has support for MP3, WMA and protected WMA formats. It also has an FM tuner and can do high quality recording. If you are interested, Phillip Torrone over at Make Magazine has posted his review along with a Podcast recorded with the device. I personally hope Apple goes after them with all guns blazing and doesn’t stop until the the SuperTangent is nothing more than a SuperMemory.

Your Dog May Be an AppleWorks User

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Feedback

Thanks to listener Jakob we may now know how “Beggin’ Strips” dog snacks keep showing up on the grocery list you created in AppleWorks.

I was looking at the AppleWorks software page on Apple’s website, and saw something peculiar, along the lines of not eating the iPod Shuffle. It mentions in the first paragraph you dog using AppleWorks to remind you to feed her and has a “disclaimer” on the bottom.

See [ Screenshot 1] and [Screenshot 2]. from the AppleWorks web site.

A “Pandora’s” Box indeed

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: News

aopen cloneIt looks like a Mac Mini, but wait. Is that an Intel inside? Is this the new Intel/Apple computer we have heard about? No, it is AOpen’s new mini CPU based on the reference designs from Intel. It is aptly codenamed “Pandora” and uses an Intel Pentium M chip designed for laptops. It is scheduled for a September release date and I believe Apple’s lawyers have already marked their calanders.

MacCast 05.27.2005

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Podcast

Listen to today’s show here! podcast-mini2.gif
MC20050527.mp3 [20.98mb 45:47 64kbps]

A podcast about Macs done by a Mac geek for Mac geeks. Show 63. ABC and NBC to start podcasting, Sirius Satellite in talks with Apple on iPod, Intel’s CEO says consider Apple if you want security, iPodder X 3.0 launched, IBM to develop 45nm chip process, next generation ATI cards will feature H.264 acceleration, Apple updates Pages and Keynote, new Apple magazine ads for Tiger, Apple tablet computer rumors continue, bigger iPod Shuffles may be on the way, Apple will open three more retail stores in June, ProToolsHD adds Tiger support and Mac OS 10.4.2 update already underway. Optimizing your Mac, listeners response to Keychain syncing, creating secure backups with your iPod, international keyboard settings, auto hiding apps at startup, help menus continue to multiply, how I archive the MacCast, buy Dan’s podcasting book and get an iPed discount at Thought-out. New music, Enniscorthy in a Bottle by The Bloody Irish Boys. I’m not bad I just sound that way.

Shownotes: HTML or OPML

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MacCast listeners get 20% iPed Products from Thoughtout

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: News

iPed 2Hey gang. MacCast listener and supporter Mike Talmadge has come through once again. He has set up a special area on his site, http://www.thoughtout.biz/maccast, and for the next 10 days is offering a 20% discount on iPed products for MacCast listeners. To get this discount use the link and login below:

offer: 20% off iPed products for MacCast listeners
link: http://www.thoughtout.biz/maccast
username: maccast
password: macgeek

Thanks Mike!

PDF Desktops in Tiger

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Feedback

Listener Jeff just discovered that Tiger now supports PDFs as desktop pictures.

I ran across a feature of Tiger that I thought your listeners might like.

When changing the Desktop background on Mac OS 10.4.1 you can now select .pdf files and Tiger will set your desktop background to the first page in the .pdf document.

Turn your iLife into Comics

Written by: Adam Christianson

Categories: Reviews

By Gabe

You’ve got a digital camera and take hundreds, maybe thousands, of photos of friends, family, pets and places. Every so often you send them out by email, put them on a CD, post them to Flickr or to your own web page, or print out a selection. Maybe you’ve even tried iPhoto’s book feature. Well, here’s something else you can do with those photos. Make a comic strip!!

Your comic lifeThis remarkably intuitive program will let a complete beginner make a professional looking comic strip in about 15 minutes flat from an existing stock of iPhoto images. Open the program and you are greeted by a blank page. Drag on a comic strip template of your choice. Meanwhile… your iPhoto library loads on the right hand side. Then… drag and drop your photos into place. Move and resize the photos if necessary. This takes a little practice but is simple once you realise that double-clicking within a pane selects an image. Finally… drag on captions and speech bubbles, and fill with your own witticisms. Pow!! It really couldn’t be simpler…

The finished product looks very professional because the templates are so well designed. If you want to add more pages to your comic you can, and as you get to know the program you can fiddle around with many of the controls, such as border widths and lettering.

The simplest use of Comic Life is to make a photo story, adding thought bubbles to pictures of your pre-verbal infant reaching for the phone, for example. And I guess that’s what most people will use it for. It’s ideal for making humorous birthday cards for friends or even a my-life-so-far book for an 18 year old. There’s also potential for creating how-to manuals. But this is such a well-rounded program I don’t see why it couldn’t be used to put together a semi-pro comic strip or graphic novel. It would be ideal for story-boarding a film or may even be used by those with a creative bent to make more abstract creations. It just depends on how much time and effort you want to put into the project. If you are prepared to go the extra step of staging photos with the intention of adding captions later, you may be likely to produce more interesting and coherent comics than if you just try to add balloons to pre-existing photos, amusing though that is.

There are many additional features which make Comic Life fun to use. Comic sound effects, for example, accompany drag and drop actions. I guess these will appeal to kids. I find them fun and not at all irritating, probably because I’m pretty immature, but if you don’t like them you can always turn them off. If you’ve got an iSight camera you can use that to import pictures. You can publish to a .Mac account if you have one. You can export or print to a range of formats. People are already sharing their comics on Flickr with the “comiclife” tag. Follow this link to get a taste of the output. In Tiger OSX 10.4, new iPhoto features for applying filters to photos are also integrated into Comic Life. However, I’m still running Panther OSX 10.3.9 so I have yet to check out these new features.

The developers of Comic Life at Plasq are very helpful, which bodes well for future enhancements. I posted a bug (to do with stuck layers) on their message board and within 24 hours I had a reply saying they were working on the problem and then a fix – version 1.1.1 – was emailed to me! One or two people have reported bugs that the Plasq team are still working on. For example, slowness in loading the iPhoto library (which may be connected with file sizes in the iPhoto library). However, on my aging G3 Pismo 500Mhz PowerBook with 1Gb of memory, I have no slowness at all.

In my view Comic Life is one of those rare programs that does something useful that nobody else has thought of and does it very well indeed. It adds a whole new dimension to iPhoto, but is not limited to that. It’s so easy to use that you could add a caption to a photo of your boss and have it circulating round the office faster than he could say “You’re fired Simpson!!” But if you’re really serious about comics, you can put together something very professional looking while eliminating much of the tedium of creating borders, lettering and captions. For professional comic strip illustrators, I imagine this program could be a great help in story-boarding at the very least.

You can download Comic Life from Plasq for a 30-day no-restrictions try out. After 30 days output is watermarked. Comic Life 1.1.1 costs $24.95, in the currency of your choice, from the Plasq website. It used to be $40, I believe, and I think the new price is very good value. When my 30 day testing period is up I fully expect to buy it (and that don’t happen too often round here!). For the moment Comic Life is Mac only although the Plasq crew do have plans for a Windows version. It’s fun, elegant and user friendly, just what you’d expect on a Mac!