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Feb 16 2008, 05:37 PM
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#11
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Newbie [ Level 2 ] Group: Members Posts: 15 Joined: 14-February 08 Member No.: 28,422 |
Here are soem great Open Source alternatives you can use on the mac.
Web Browsing Mozilla Firefox The premier free, open-source browser. Tabs, pop-up blocking, themes, and extensions. Considered by many to be the world's best browser. Camino Based on the same Mozilla foundation as Firefox, Camino is a more native OS X app. Fast and simple. Video Player / Video Podcasting Miro Beautiful interface. Plays any video type (much more than quicktime). Subscribe to video RSS, download, and watch all in one. Torrent support. Search and download from YouTube and others. IM - Instant Messaging Adium Connect to multiple IM accounts simultaneously in a single app, including: AOL IM, MSN, and Jabber. Beautiful, themable interface. Application Launching Quicksilver Quicksilver lets you start applications (and do just about everything) with a few quick taps of your fingers. Warning: start using Quicksilver and you won't be able to imagine using a Mac without it. Software packs MacLibre Installs a pack of great open source apps (including many on this page) and keeps them updated for you. Mozilla Thunderbird Powerful spam filtering, solid interface, and all the features you need. Utilities The Unarchiver Uncompress RAR, 7zip, tar, and bz2 files on your Mac. Many new Mac users will be puzzled the first time they download a RAR file. Do them a favor and download UnRarX for them! RSS Vienna Very nice, native RSS client. RSSOwl Solid cross-platform RSS client. Peer-to-Peer Filesharing Cabos A simple, easy to use filesharing program. Gnutella network. Transmission Very nice torrent downloader. Running Windows Software on Macs Q Emulator Run Windows programs on your Intel Mac at near native speed. Works on G4 / G5 Macs too, but much slower. Podcasting Juice Solid podcasting client. Video Playback VLC Plays more video files than most players: Quicktime, AVI, DIVX, OGG, and more. Pretty good interface. MPlayer The interface and buttons are not as nice or as Mac-like in feel, but it may play even more video files than VLC. MPlayer Perian A plugin that allows quicktime to play additional video formats. (Included in Democracy Player.) iPod Ripping Senuti Get music off of your iPod onto any computer. iPodDisk Copy music off your iPod in the finder, like a regular disk drive. DVD Ripping Handbrake DVD ripper and MPEG-4 / H.264 encoding. Very simple to use. CD / DVD Burning Burn CD and DVD Burner. Burn any video to a disc that plays in your DVD player! Privacy Vidalia This TOR frontend keeps you anonymous on the web using military-grade techniques. For use with Firefox see: TorButton. Word Processing / Office Suites Bean Very fast and easy to use word processor. Live word count, autosaving, more. NeoOffice Built on OpenOffice.org. Big, full featured suite of tools for word processing and spreadsheets. Compatible with Microsoft Word documents and OpenDocument Format. AbiWord A word processor. Leaner and quicker than OpenOffice. Compatible with Microsoft Word documents and OpenDocument Format. Wifi Scanning KisMac The best wireless scanner for Mac. Find wireless access when you're on the go. Sound Recording Audacity Simple sound recording tool. Graphics, Photo, Publishing Seashore Based on Gimp, but doesn't require X11. Xee Fast image viewer and image browser. gimp Photo editing application that rivals Photoshop in features (requires X11). Inkscape Vector graphics application (requires X11). Scribus Desktop publishing. Complicated install, but a nice app. FTP / SFTP Cyberduck Very good all-around ftp program. OneButton FTP Simple, fast FTP, with a focus on "advanced queuing". Fugu Not as polished as Cyberduck (and only for SFTP) but has a side by side interface showing your files and the remote files. HTML / Text Editing Smultron Text / html editor. Integrates with Cyberduck for editing websites. Nvu Visual tool for making websites (WYSIWYG html editor), comparable to Dreamweaver. IRC Colloquy Great IRC client. |
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Feb 17 2008, 02:44 AM
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#12
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Super Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 660 Joined: 12-July 06 From: Ontario, Canada Member No.: 14,464 |
Here are soem great Open Source alternatives you can use on the mac. Web Browsing Mozilla Firefox The premier free, open-source browser. Tabs, pop-up blocking, themes, and extensions. Considered by many to be the world's best browser. Camino Based on the same Mozilla foundation as Firefox, Camino is a more native OS X app. Fast and simple. Don't you think I already use Firefox? Application Launching Quicksilver Quicksilver lets you start applications (and do just about everything) with a few quick taps of your fingers. Warning: start using Quicksilver and you won't be able to imagine using a Mac without it. I use RocketDock for Windows so I think that the Dock in Mac would be sufficient for me Email Mozilla Thunderbird Powerful spam filtering, solid interface, and all the features you need. RSS Vienna Very nice, native RSS client. RSSOwl Solid cross-platform RSS client. I do use Mozilla Thunderbird but I am more used to using the web-based GMail interface and also for Windows Live Hotmail. As for RSS, I use Google Reader only when necessary and the in-browser "live bookmarks" to keep track of weather from Environment Canada. Otherwise, I don't use RSS all that much. Peer-to-Peer Filesharing Cabos A simple, easy to use filesharing program. Gnutella network. Transmission Very nice torrent downloader. Does LimeWire work on Macs? It's open-source, but I don't know if it is Mac-compatible. I use it on Linux. Running Windows Software on Macs Q Emulator Run Windows programs on your Intel Mac at near native speed. Works on G4 / G5 Macs too, but much slower. Is this something similar to Boot Camp (something that I've heard of)? Or is Boot Camp a partitioning utility thing? Also, is VMWare something similar to this Q Emulator thing? Video Playback VLC Plays more video files than most players: Quicktime, AVI, DIVX, OGG, and more. Pretty good interface. MPlayer The interface and buttons are not as nice or as Mac-like in feel, but it may play even more video files than VLC. MPlayer Perian A plugin that allows quicktime to play additional video formats. (Included in Democracy Player.) I think that QuickTime and iTunes would be sufficient for me on a Mac. MPlayer I use on Ubuntu, it's really basic and can play DVDs for me. Word Processing / Office Suites Bean Very fast and easy to use word processor. Live word count, autosaving, more. NeoOffice Built on OpenOffice.org. Big, full featured suite of tools for word processing and spreadsheets. Compatible with Microsoft Word documents and OpenDocument Format. AbiWord A word processor. Leaner and quicker than OpenOffice. Compatible with Microsoft Word documents and OpenDocument Format. Well there is Microsoft Office for Mac, but it isn't open-source. I don't think my parents would buy that either, so OpenOffice all the way. AbiWord is quite simple and can run from my USB drive, I've never heard of NeoOffice before. Sound Recording Audacity Simple sound recording tool. I use Audacity on Windows and Linux as well as my USB drive. Very useful for some quick sound editing. Graphics, Photo, Publishing Seashore Based on Gimp, but doesn't require X11. Xee Fast image viewer and image browser. gimp Photo editing application that rivals Photoshop in features (requires X11). Inkscape Vector graphics application (requires X11). Scribus Desktop publishing. Complicated install, but a nice app. I use the GIMP, I have it on Linux and I use it on Windows. A bit hard to learn for beginners, but you get the hang of it once you explore more of its options. Once you learn the GIMP, Photoshop becomes easily (it could be the other way around, but I don't know). HTML / Text Editing Smultron Text / html editor. Integrates with Cyberduck for editing websites. Nvu Visual tool for making websites (WYSIWYG html editor), comparable to Dreamweaver. I think I would prefer a text editor for editing HTML sites, but I'm trying NVU on Ubuntu right now. I don't like WYSIWYG software much, but when needed, I do use it. I write HTML faster though. Thanks for the list of software, I'm sure that many others will find it to be useful. As for getting a Mac, I don't think my parents are that interested in it. |
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Feb 17 2008, 03:49 AM
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#13
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,735 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 |
Don't you think I already use Firefox? I use RocketDock for Windows so I think that the Dock in Mac would be sufficient for me I do use Mozilla Thunderbird but I am more used to using the web-based GMail interface and also for Windows Live Hotmail. As for RSS, I use Google Reader only when necessary and the in-browser "live bookmarks" to keep track of weather from Environment Canada. Otherwise, I don't use RSS all that much. Does LimeWire work on Macs? It's open-source, but I don't know if it is Mac-compatible. I use it on Linux. Is this something similar to Boot Camp (something that I've heard of)? Or is Boot Camp a partitioning utility thing? Also, is VMWare something similar to this Q Emulator thing? I think that QuickTime and iTunes would be sufficient for me on a Mac. MPlayer I use on Ubuntu, it's really basic and can play DVDs for me. Well there is Microsoft Office for Mac, but it isn't open-source. I don't think my parents would buy that either, so OpenOffice all the way. AbiWord is quite simple and can run from my USB drive, I've never heard of NeoOffice before. I use Audacity on Windows and Linux as well as my USB drive. Very useful for some quick sound editing. I use the GIMP, I have it on Linux and I use it on Windows. A bit hard to learn for beginners, but you get the hang of it once you explore more of its options. Once you learn the GIMP, Photoshop becomes easily (it could be the other way around, but I don't know). I think I would prefer a text editor for editing HTML sites, but I'm trying NVU on Ubuntu right now. I don't like WYSIWYG software much, but when needed, I do use it. I write HTML faster though. Thanks for the list of software, I'm sure that many others will find it to be useful. As for getting a Mac, I don't think my parents are that interested in it. LimeWire works on Macs since it is written in Java. As for boot camp, it's just a BIOS layer on top of Mac's EFI for dual booting. You can use Boot Camp to boot Linux too. I rather you use VMWare Fusion or Parallels Desktop for Mac to run Windows in your MacOS X installation than QEMU because QEMU will emulate everything, you don't want that since it will take a lot of resources. VMWare and Parallels uses virtual machining and splits the CPU and resources to handle multiple operating systems. NeoOffice is basically OpenOffice but written in Java so that it runs on the Mac easier and to incorporate the Aqua look and feel. GIMP works on Macs too. You could also use TextEdit to make webpages. xboxrulz |
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Apr 3 2008, 06:01 PM
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#14
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Advanced Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 138 Joined: 3-April 08 From: Milling about Member No.: 29,596 |
I just wanted to add that Macs are not actually more expensive. This is a line I hear all the time and it drives me batty. Sure you can go to Wal-Mart and buy a cheap PC for 500 dollars. However if you look the actual specifications you will discover that you are not getting a good deal at all. Apple simply does not bother making very low end machines.
For a short time I worked on AOL's help desk (an absolute nightmare!) There was an astounding amount of calls from users who could not run the AOL software on brand new machines. These were PCs that shipped with just enough ram to run Windows and nothing else. (It is hard to explain to people that the machine they just bought is total garbage.) The cost of ownership for a Mac, in my experience, is much less than a Windows machine. Macs that are several years old still tend to run rather well and have a usefull life much longer than the average PC. Apple does not have the goal of making their own products obsolete every few years. |
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Apr 3 2008, 07:28 PM
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#15
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,735 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 |
I just wanted to add that Macs are not actually more expensive. This is a line I hear all the time and it drives me batty. Sure you can go to Wal-Mart and buy a cheap PC for 500 dollars. However if you look the actual specifications you will discover that you are not getting a good deal at all. Apple simply does not bother making very low end machines. For a short time I worked on AOL's help desk (an absolute nightmare!) There was an astounding amount of calls from users who could not run the AOL software on brand new machines. These were PCs that shipped with just enough ram to run Windows and nothing else. (It is hard to explain to people that the machine they just bought is total garbage.) The cost of ownership for a Mac, in my experience, is much less than a Windows machine. Macs that are several years old still tend to run rather well and have a usefull life much longer than the average PC. Apple does not have the goal of making their own products obsolete every few years. Actually, even though I support Apple, I must say that I just built a gaming PC for $500 CAD, it was great, it was comparable w/ an iMac with some stuff obviously axed. Main reason? CPU, I use an AMD chipset/CPU. That's the bad thing about Apple choosing one manufacturer, you may get cheaper parts from the competition instead of sticking to one company. xboxrulz |
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Apr 7 2008, 04:29 PM
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#16
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Advanced Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 138 Joined: 3-April 08 From: Milling about Member No.: 29,596 |
Actually, even though I support Apple, I must say that I just built a gaming PC for $500 CAD, it was great, it was comparable w/ an iMac with some stuff obviously axed. Main reason? CPU, I use an AMD chipset/CPU. That's the bad thing about Apple choosing one manufacturer, you may get cheaper parts from the competition instead of sticking to one company. xboxrulz Yes, if you know what you are doing you can build your own system for a decent price. But, I have to ask, does that $500 include a Monitor and an OS? |
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May 23 2008, 09:14 PM
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#17
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,735 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 |
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Jul 8 2008, 02:53 PM
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#18
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Newbie [ Level 1 ] Group: Members Posts: 1 Joined: 8-July 08 Member No.: 31,354 |
Why I would buy a mac would be because I wouldn't have the constant fear of viruses hovering over my head. I used to have a pc but it would get viruses all the time and I would constantly get the BSOD, even after it had been repaired by the geek squad! (I'm not that good at taking things apart. So I had them do it.) Despite the fact that macs aren't great for gaming, I personally like drawing in photoshop and browsing the internet better. I guess it kind of depends on why you want a computer.
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Jul 8 2008, 05:14 PM
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#19
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,735 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 |
Remember that it's just a myth that Mac is invulnerable to viruses. All operating systems are vulnerable to viruses. It's just the degree of vulnerability. Windows is notorious for its insecurity. The fact that it's the most used operating system in the world makes it even worse for the operating system as people keep hammering the operating system. Thus, many people find it really scary to use Windows.
xboxrulz |
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Jul 24 2008, 01:27 AM
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#20
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Member [ Level 2 ] Group: Members Posts: 69 Joined: 21-September 07 Member No.: 24,999 |
You should buy Mac because.....It's the coolest operating system in the world today. If you want to be just as cool as the Mac does, then buy Mac OS products.
Mac is for the hippies! Mac is for the people who are tired and wasted in seeing Windows OSes. This post has been edited by rockershive: Jul 24 2008, 01:30 AM |
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