Archive for December, 2007

Supaa Marioo Galaxyyy!

I just bought it yesterday and OMG most addictive platformer ever! It really fucks with your brain when you’re running away from a boss plant/alien thing upside down on a planet while simultaneously using the Wiimote to bombard it with star pieces to slow it down. The Good Game review said beginners will fall off the edge a lot, and it’s true. But my thumb keeps falling off the Nunchuck joystick due to the incessant direction changes needed so I wish it had a dip in it like the 360 joysticks. I’m gonna go play it some more ^_^

My windows are still intact

This afternoon, a spectacular hailstorm blew in and out of Deni in the space of 30 minutes. I took some snaps and a video. A warning to sensitive viewers the video unintentionally captured a very disoriented parrot.

Oh yeah, and I totally *heart* iMovie for being easy to use and for having built-in YouTube uploading.

But waaaaah! The power went off and I missed Avatar :’-(

MacBook Pro dust plugs, please

MacBook Pro Plugs

Laugh if you want, but there is a product I have wanted that as far as I know doesn’t exist. But if it did, I would buy it. I want a set of rubber dust plugs to fill up the ports I rarely use on my MacBook Pro, e.g. Firewire, Ethernet. I know this is a really pedantic idea and I’m not that precious about my MacBook Pro. But I do think there is a market for it, and I wish someone would hurry up and invent it.

Pnau Pnau

pnau pnau

I got Pnau’s latest album last week, and it’s been rocking my socks off. They said in an interview on jtv that they both walked into a studio one day and decided to make a kick arse album. Well, they’ve done it. Apparently the album sounds a lot like 80s dance music, but on first listen it didn’t strike me as being that 80s, apart from a couple of tracks. But in retrospect, it sort of does. It kinda makes me want to listen to some 80s dance and see if I like it. Any suggestions, Josh?

The first 5 tracks are currently on their MySpace player. Go check em out. And if that doesn’t convince you, you can get a signed copy from JB or read some reviews.

My Leopard Likes

As I was chowing down on some Apple crumble the other day, I found myself musing on some of the aspects of Mac OS X Leopard that have impressed me in recent weeks.

TV Out That JustWorks(TM)

Given that watching stuff through TV-Out is one of the primary uses of my MBP, I consider this pretty darn important. OK so it cost $41 to get the TV adaptor, but it’s totally worth it. Set up the TV as an additional display, switch to PAL, turn on overscan (who wouldn’t?), drag VLC onto the other screen, maximize and hit play. That’s it. The quality is absolutely superb and it shits all over my old HP’s TV-out. Colours are vibrant, and the display doesn’t go to sleep half way through the video (though that may be VLC’s doing, I’m not sure). The adaptor has dual outputs; composite and s-video so that’s also a plus.

Native Display Zoom

Being able to zoom the display using simple shortcut keys or mouse actions is a truly innovative feature. E.g. Ctrl-MouseScroll zooms to the current mouse cursor position, and the zoomed display pans the screen as you move the cursor. Or with the keyboard, Cmd-Opt-8 toggles zoom; zoom in and out with Cmd-Opt-plus and Cmd-Opt-minus respectively; and toggle smoothing with Cmd-Opt-\ (I have it on). This works a treat when watching widescreen videos on my TV through the adaptor. And in truth this feature is why I’m still using VLC to play videos on the Mac. In Media Player Classic, my video player of choice on Windows, you can zoom in and out with 9 and 1 on the numpad, or map to other keys. VLC however, has no such keyboard shortcut so I was forced to watch skinny widescreen videos half the height of my 4:3 TV screen. Then I discovered the OS X built in zoom and literally did a little dance around the loungeroom (watch on YouTube).

Custom Keyboard Shortcuts

Since Ubuntu, I’ve thought this is a feature that really should be built into all OSs. It’s just bloody handy to be able to map functions to keys that make sense to you, not just to the designers of the OS. E.g. I remapped “take screenshot” to Cmd-F7, the key with a little screen icon.

Native Disk Image Support

Mac OS X’s support for disk images has been one of the most impressive features I’ve seen so far in an OS. While I haven’t yet had a chance to explore the imaging support in great depth, certain features stand out. For example, you can download an ISO image and mount it straight on your desktop and have a look at the contents. DMG has become the default Mac archive format as well as being a flexible format used for both hard drive and optical disk images.

The Dashboard & Web Clips

The dashboard has suddenly become useful again with the introduction of web clips, which let you convert sections of web pages into dashboard widgets. Along side traditional widgets for date countdown, Internode usage, Gmail and iSlayer, I have web clips for the Elders weather forecast and latest BOM radar image which removes the hassle of opening a browser, loading the bookmark, etc. It’s just there when you hit F12. The only downside to the dashboard is that widgets can be designed to be any bloody shape under the sun, which sometimes makes it difficult to get a nice looking layout, but for the 5 seconds the dashboard is open, it hardly matters.

The Little Things

There’s loads of other simple innovations in OS X, e.g. when you rename a file with an extension, instead of selecting the entire filename, Finder selects all of the text before the extension so you are not constantly having to retype .jpg or whatever when you rename a bunch of files. Another one is the spotlight search box. Hit Cmd-Space and type the first few letters of the app you want to run and hit enter. It’s like Windows+R on steroids. I also love the Cmd-comma shortcut which brings up program preferences in almost every app.

Dock Folder Launcher

Download Dock Icon

I’ve been using a stack on the Dock for my Downloads folder for a while now and sure, it’s pretty, but not terribly functional. You can open and drag files but that’s about it. What I want and I’m used to (in Windows) is an icon that opens the Downloads folder in Finder. I could use the Finder icon on the left of the dock, but there are two problems with that. First I would have to change the default location for new Finder windows, and I like having that as Applications. Second is that if you already have a Finder window open, clicking the icon just focuses that window instead of opening one in the default location.

Of course, I tried just dragging the folder onto the main dock area but it only accepts folders on that magical area to the right of the pedestrian crossing. And they show up as stacks. So I’ve come up with a quick and dirty workaround using AppleScript. Read on for the details.
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