Tuesday, 31 March 2009

Desktopia


Desktop Backgrounds are lovely. They let you put a nice, personal spin on your computer or laptop, and can bring back memories if you stick up a photo. But regretfully, once you stick up a wallpaper, you're stuck with it until you change it. Leopard does come with an option to change the background at certain time intervals, but you can't choose which wallpaper you want and when.

Desktopia is a great little programme that allows you to set different wallpapers for different times of the days. You can have a nice sunrise at dawn, and fix yourself up with a picture of the starlit sky at night.

Getting Desktopia started can be quite difficult. Mounting the disk image and copying the application to the "Applications" folder is simple enough, but once you start Desktopia, the window doesn't appear. Instead you have to click on the Desktopia icon in the menu bar, and then click on "Show Controller". But besides this, Desktopia is a very simple and enjoyable piece of software to use.

Monday, 30 March 2009

iLinkPod



I love iPods. They're easy to use, have an abundance of accessories available, and they make me look very suave when wearing the sleek white earphones. But to me, their biggest fault is the fact that they don't come with support for transferring files on them directly onto a computer.

Luckily, there are many pieces of software that allow you to do this. One of them is iLinkPod. It's very easy to use. Simply connect your iPod to your computer, then launch iLinkPod and click "Select Your iPod". Then you just need to find your iPod in the Finder, and all of the available buttons will be activated, and you can access all of the available functions.

With iLinkPod, you can:
  • View the iPod system info.
  • Create a folder on your computer and iPod to access the hidden audio files.
  • Backup all the files from your iPod onto a destination folder on your computer.
  • Stop whichever action is in progress.

Sunday, 29 March 2009

TrailRunner



Ever wondered how far your weekly jog takes you? Or how long you walk during your journey to work each morning? Well wonder no more!

TrailRunner is a route planning application. It doesn't matter what for. Walking, Running, Biking, Hiking, Roller-blading, skiing, or even driving. The maps are loaded from Google

Maps, so you'll get coverage pretty much wherever you are. You can even plot routes through areas without roads, like fields and parks.

You can use TrailRunner to automatically create routes from a destination of your choice. Simply plot any paths near where you want your route, enter a desired length of workout, and TrailRunner will optimise a route for you. It will also tell you how long the route will take at different speeds.

TrailRunner is also compatible with iPhone GPS, Nike + iPod Sports Kit and Garmin Forerunner and Garmin Edge devices to take your running to the next level.

TrailRunner Website

Saturday, 28 March 2009

The Unarchiver


There's nothing more irritating than downloading a compressed file off of the internet, and then discovering that your current decompressor doesn't recognise the file format.

With The Unarchiver, the chance of this happening is greatly reduced. This application can handle a ridiculous amount of formats, including common ones like RAR and ZIP, as well as thirty-four other, more obscure ones like ZOM and CPIO files. You need never experience that oh-so-horrible frustration again. Hooray!

The Unarchiver also comes with a few neat customisation options too, to make your unarchiving process as exhilarating as decompressing a file can possibly be. You can choose to extract the archives to any custom folder of your choice, and you can also have the archive moved to the trash once the files have been extracted. Now that's good decompressing!

Friday, 27 March 2009

Image Tool



Sometimes, all you want to do is resize a photo, but you don't want to open up a large, resource-hogging application like Photoshop or GIMP.

Image Tool is small (Very small. 372Kb) programme that lets you do that, with minimal fuss. You import an image, click the button with the resizing figure you want, save the new picture as either a JPG, GIF, TIFF, PNG or BMP, and voila! You have a resized image, in less than a minute.

And if you don't want your image resized by one of the default amounts, you can choose to alter either the height or weight to a desired value, and the entire picture is resized to scale.

Download it Now

Thursday, 26 March 2009

Evernote



There are two main rules, pillars if you will, that I choose to live by.
  1. Don't eat yellow snow.
  2. You can never have too many to-do notes.
As important as the first rule is, and as much as I'd like to teach you all about it, the second pillar of my beliefs is a lot more apt for this blog.

Evernote is a file uploading service that is in many ways similar to Dropbox. It allows files to be synced to multiple computers, you can view and download the files direct from a browser, and they both have nice little menu icons that appear at the top of your screen. But despite these similarities, Evernote serves an entirely different purpose.

Whereas Dropbox is designed for all types of files, Evernote is specialised to one area. Notes. (It's in the name.) Revision notes, to-do notes, message notes, business notes. They're all covered. You can upload a note by either:
  • Typing it in directly.
  • Taking a photo of it using any device you want.
  • Copying and Pasting.
  • Dragging and Dropping them into the desktop client.
  • Emailing them directly to your account.
  • Scanning the notes.
Once the note is in your account, it is then "synced" to every other device registered with your account. Evernote then scans your images for words and you are able to scan through your immense library of notes for a certain keyword you're interested in. Never again will you forget that sacred Lasagne recipe!

Note: (Forgive the horrible pun)
Registration is required for Evernote, although this is a short process only lasting about a minute. Email, Username and Password are the only required fields.

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

Orator



Any of you who are, or have ever been a student will know about the desperate last minute cram before an exam, when revision is packed into every minute possible.

Orator can help squeeze out a bit of revision time no matter where you are. Just write, paste, or drag text into the Orator window, choose one of the twenty-four available voices, and then save the text as an AIFF. These files take up a load of space (about 10Mb per minute), but can be converted to MP3s in iTunes. Then you simply need to upload your file onto your MP3 player, and you're off! Revision. 24/7. Does it really get any better than that?