Category Archives: Uncategorized

Bowtie and Coversutra – Match Made in Heaven

I’ve posted about CoverSutra before, specifically about its appearance. I didn’t like the default look of the search bar or desktop album art, so I found a collection of modifications that created an interface I liked.

A few days ago I discovered a program with similar abilities to CoverSutra, called Bowtie. It provides a window which one can use to control iTunes, and the bonus of Bowtie over CoverSutra is its skinability. It comes with 11 skins by default, but by looking around the MacThemes Forums, one can find many, many more great themes.

I was considering switching over to Bowtie completely, especially considering that it’s free, but it lacked a few things that CoverSutra has, which I think are very necessary. The first of these, and the most apparent to me, is the lack of a ‘hide from dock’ option, resulting in it always taking up space on the dock, even though it’s a very small app, and doesn’t really warrant a dock icon. A menu bar item, like CoverSutra uses, would be much better for this kind of application. This inadequacy can be remedied, however, with a small app called Dock Dodger, which can hide any application from the dock and cmd+tab switcher.

The other feature Bowtie lacks is the ability to search through the iTunes library, which is pretty much the core of CoverSutra. Upon this realization, it became clear that running Bowtie and CoverSutra side-by-side was definitely a viable option. Using Dock Dodger, I have Bowtie hidden in the background, so that I can use its interface instead of CoverSutra’s desktop album art (the Bowtie theme called ‘Wet Floor’ is really good for this usage), while I continue to use CoverSutra as my main music navigator.

As a final note, I feel I should mention that up until Bowtie, I still used my perennial favorite utility, Quicksilver, for my iTunes-related hotkey needs. CoverSutra’s hotkeys work great, but I found that there was no way to get the CoverSutra notification under the menu bar to appear when using CoverSutra’s own hotkeys to change the song, so I refrained from using them. However, Quicksilver hotkeys can be somewhat sluggish at first, and Bowtie loads faster at boot-up than Quicksilver, so I recently moved my play/pause and next/previous hotkeys over to Bowtie, and my increase/decrease volume & rating hotkeys to CoverSutra. This setup has treated me well so far, and I’m very happy with it.

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Bowtie and Coversutra – Match Made in Heaven

I’ve posted about CoverSutra before, specifically about its appearance. I didn’t like the default look of the search bar or desktop album art, so I found a collection of modifications that created an interface I liked.

A few days ago I discovered a program with similar abilities to CoverSutra, called Bowtie. It provides a window which one can use to control iTunes, and the bonus of Bowtie over CoverSutra is its skinability. It comes with 11 skins by default, but by looking around the MacThemes Forums, one can find many, many more great themes.

I was considering switching over to Bowtie completely, especially considering that it’s free, but it lacked a few things that CoverSutra has, which I think are very necessary. The first of these, and the most apparent to me, is the lack of a ‘hide from dock’ option, resulting in it always taking up space on the dock, even though it’s a very small app, and doesn’t really warrant a dock icon. A menu bar item, like CoverSutra uses, would be much better for this kind of application. This inadequacy can be remedied, however, with a small app called Dock Dodger, which can hide any application from the dock and cmd+tab switcher.

The other feature Bowtie lacks is the ability to search through the iTunes library, which is pretty much the core of CoverSutra. Upon this realization, it became clear that running Bowtie and CoverSutra side-by-side was definitely a viable option. Using Dock Dodger, I have Bowtie hidden in the background, so that I can use its interface instead of CoverSutra’s desktop album art (the Bowtie theme called ‘Wet Floor’ is really good for this usage), while I continue to use CoverSutra as my main music navigator.

As a final note, I feel I should mention that up until Bowtie, I still used my perennial favorite utility, Quicksilver, for my iTunes-related hotkey needs. CoverSutra’s hotkeys work great, but I found that there was no way to get the CoverSutra notification under the menu bar to appear when using CoverSutra’s own hotkeys to change the song, so I refrained from using them. However, Quicksilver hotkeys can be somewhat sluggish at first, and Bowtie loads faster at boot-up than Quicksilver, so I recently moved my play/pause and next/previous hotkeys over to Bowtie, and my increase/decrease volume & rating hotkeys to CoverSutra. This setup has treated me well so far, and I’m very happy with it.

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All versions of CrossOver are free for TODAY ONLY

CrossOver, the amazing product for Mac and Linux that lets you run Windows applications (such as Uru) natively, is FREE for today only! Crossover is a great investment normally, but since it’s free for today you have no excuse not to get it if you have a Mac or a Linux machine.

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Date Difference 1.1

Ok I finally found a Tiger machine to test Date Difference 1.1 on, and it seems to work fine, so I’m going to go ahead and release it! You can download Date Difference 1.1 at the same place as before, but now it should be better than before!

New features:

  • Fixed problems with compatibility in OS X 10.4 (ie not launching)
  • Fixed problems with time intervals being too long for the computer to keep track of (dates before sometime around 1940 returned a negative result)
  • Added option to use zeroes or not (meaning if there are 0 days in between the two dates, by default Date Difference no longer displays them). This can be changed in the preferences.
  • Added Sparkle for automatic updates
  • Changed the About window to be prettier

Known issues:

  • Preferences are not saved, you have to set them every time it launches.
  • If it’s giving you strange results the first time you launch it, try re-launching it before telling me!

Enjoy, and please tell me any bugs you encounter, in the comments section!

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Date Difference 1.1

Ok I finally found a Tiger machine to test Date Difference 1.1 on, and it seems to work fine, so I’m going to go ahead and release it! You can download Date Difference 1.1 at the same place as before, but now it should be better than before!

New features:

  • Fixed problems with compatibility in OS X 10.4 (ie not launching)
  • Fixed problems with time intervals being too long for the computer to keep track of (dates before sometime around 1940 returned a negative result)
  • Added option to use zeroes or not (meaning if there are 0 days in between the two dates, by default Date Difference no longer displays them). This can be changed in the preferences.
  • Added Sparkle for automatic updates
  • Changed the About window to be prettier

Known issues:

  • Preferences are not saved, you have to set them every time it launches.
  • If it’s giving you strange results the first time you launch it, try re-launching it before telling me!

Enjoy, and please tell me any bugs you encounter, in the comments section!

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Problems With Date Difference On Older OSes

As Hans Swinnen pointed out in the comments on the Date Difference post, Date Difference doesn’t seem to work all the time on older versions of OS X. I checked, and found that the reason for that is that I built it with the 10.5 SDK instead of an older one. I have version 1.1 ready, built with the 10.4 SDK (I’m working on getting a 10.3 SDK so I can make it as compatible as I said it was…) UPDATE: Ok, forget 10.3. Sorry, but it’s too much of a headache to get 10.3 support working. I got the SDK installed, but when I tried to build, it spat out no less than 12 errors at me, which I really don’t want to fix. If you’re using 10.3, sorry but you’re out of luck.

I have a 10.5 machine myself, as well as a 10.3 machine, but I find myself in need of a beta tester for 10.4, if anyone would be would like to help out.

UPDATE: It also seems that any two dates with more than 2147483647 seconds in between…doesn’t work. If you’re getting a negative result, it’s a bug. I’m working on fixing this, and I should have version 1.1 out tonight or tomorrow, with full backwards compatibility backwards compatibility to 10.4, support for greater time intervals, and one or two other features I’ve implemented since 1.0…

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Problems With Date Difference On Older OSes

As Hans Swinnen pointed out in the comments on the Date Difference post, Date Difference doesn’t seem to work all the time on older versions of OS X. I checked, and found that the reason for that is that I built it with the 10.5 SDK instead of an older one. I have version 1.1 ready, built with the 10.4 SDK (I’m working on getting a 10.3 SDK so I can make it as compatible as I said it was…) UPDATE: Ok, forget 10.3. Sorry, but it’s too much of a headache to get 10.3 support working. I got the SDK installed, but when I tried to build, it spat out no less than 12 errors at me, which I really don’t want to fix. If you’re using 10.3, sorry but you’re out of luck.

I have a 10.5 machine myself, as well as a 10.3 machine, but I find myself in need of a beta tester for 10.4, if anyone would be would like to help out.

UPDATE: It also seems that any two dates with more than 2147483647 seconds in between…doesn’t work. If you’re getting a negative result, it’s a bug. I’m working on fixing this, and I should have version 1.1 out tonight or tomorrow, with full backwards compatibility backwards compatibility to 10.4, support for greater time intervals, and one or two other features I’ve implemented since 1.0…

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Date Difference 1.0

Today I’m releasing version 1.0 of Date Difference, my first real app. It’s pretty simple, just give it two dates and/or times, and it tells you the length of time between them. It’s completely free, and you can get it here.

There are preferences for what units to enable or disable (days, hours, minutes, and/or seconds), and it compensates for the disabled units with the next largest enabled unit (for example, if the difference between the dates is 1 day and 2 hours, but you disable days, then it becomes 26 hours).

Stuff I’m planning on adding include support for weeks, months, and years, as well as possibly iCal integration, as well as porting it to the iPhone (as soon as I get my developer membership).

UPDATE: It seems that version 1.0 of Date Difference only works on OS X Leopard, see here for more information!

UPDATE: Version 1.1 released!

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iPhone 3G

I went to the Apple Store today to check out the new iPhone 3G. It isn’t that different from the old one, but it has much faster data speeds (getting internet data over the cellphone network), and GPS, not to mention iPhone OS 2.0 and a new back design:

The new design is actually slightly thicker than the old one, but it isn’t that noticeable, since it’s also slightly curved in the back. It feels better in your hand, and also a tiny bit heavier than the old one. It has more…presence than the old one, I think.

The 2.0 software is nice, the new App Store allows you to download applications written by people who aren’t Apple, stuff like games and apps for social networks like Facebook and MySpace, plus an official AIM client by AOL. Some of the stuff (most of it) is free, but a lot costs between $.99 and $9.99 (Super Monkey Ball, the most popular item on the store at the moment, weighs in at $9.99). The software is a free upgrade for people with the original iPhone, but unfortunately it’s $9.99 for iPod Touch users such as myself.

The new iPhone costs less than the old ones did, only $199 for the 8gb variety and $299 for 16gb. Unfortunately, the upped data speed means that the monthly plans cost more, $10 more for the faster data (mandatory), and $5 more for 200 text messages (optional, but there are no text messages included with the data plan), bringing the monthly cost to $85/month. The 16gb model also comes in white:

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MO:RE

Yesterday, Cyan Worlds delivered a letter to the Guild of Messengers, to be released to the community-at-large. It reads:

Shorah,

We’ve got some good news. GameTap and Cyan Worlds have reached an agreement that would return the rights of Myst Online to Cyan Worlds! We’re very excited, but at the same time, there are some hurdles to overcome. Cyan Worlds is currently operating at a reduced capacity. We’re not in a position where we have plenty of resources and people to bring MO back fast and furiously. But we’ve got a plan, and we’d like to run it past you – our fans and supporters.

Read the whole letter here…

Basically, the letter says that we will see yet another incarnation of URU (this being the fourth Uru, following Uru Live, Uru:Ages Beyond Myst, Until Uru, and Myst Online: Uru Live, which closed just a few months ago), and that it won’t have any new Cyan-based content (at least, not at first). Instead, Myst Online: Restoration Experiment is to be much more community-supported, with a heavier emphasis on the Guild system that was established, but never really put to good use during the extent of MO:UL.

The initial thinking on the cost of this project is $25 for six months, a fee I will gladly pay for more Uru, especially if it is to have fan-run servers, like Until Uru did. I attempted to set up my own UU server back in the day, but I never got it accessible to the public before D’mala (Cyan’s official server) opened and everyone stopped caring about the fan-based servers. Understandably, I’d like another shot at running a server.

Here’s hoping that this is the Uru that finally makes it, and that the fourth time’s the charm.

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