Filed under Happenings, Industry, Mac OS, Switching to Mac by Tim Merritt

I just love how much free hype Apple’s gotten on this. Business majors and MBA candidates, rev up your graduate theses to analyze how they generate so much press mania (which most of you poor mutts will have to write in MSWord on a Windows machine). In the meantime, here’s a nicely done (and fairly plausible) wish-list for today’s announcement from Alchemist Muffin (because all the other good blog names were taken). Via Slashdot, via popurls.
Which news feed will you follow? I’m going to try several, but Fake Steve writes that he will live-blog the keynote Going to be a fun day.
apple,
events,
fake steve,
fun,
hype,
mania
January 27, 2010 at 10:58 am Comments (0)
Filed under DVD Authoring, Final Cut Pro, Instructional Video, Mac OS, QuickTime, Video by Tim Merritt

Ken Stone offers another screenshot-rich tutorial opening up some intricacies of Final Cut Studio. This time it’s Compressor 3.5 Basics. I’m still using 3.0.5, and a cranky unreliable crash-prone beast it is, but I don’t want to upgrade with several projects still incomplete. I hope to upgrade by January though. (January! Only 38 days away! Yikes!)
compressor,
mp4,
QuickTime
November 23, 2009 at 10:52 am Comments (0)
Filed under Audio, Darned Good Idea, Free Stuff, Instructional Technology, Mac OS, Photo Editing, Podcasting, QuickTime, Windows by Tim Merritt

The fine community at Macintouch points to the Mac-specific area on Old Version Downloads – OldApps.com. Find old versions of lots of software, for Mac and PC: older email programs, audio editors, picture editors, FTP programs, and more. They even have older versions of Apple’s QuickTime. Looks like a great resource, especially if you’re spiffing up an older machine to save money.
And teachers always want to save money.
November 17, 2009 at 2:49 pm Comments (0)
Filed under Darned Good Idea, Edublogging, Free Stuff, Mac OS, Web Video by Tim Merritt

I’m at altitude, on my way to a weekend away with Ellen to Boulder. Got a free pass for in-flight wifi, so I’m going to post some of the too-many open tabs I’ve been meaning to close among my browsers. Yes, browsers—I use both Firefox and Camino most of the time, and once in a while I use Safari. This post is about a great add-on that makes the web more usable, by controlling all that animated distracting hateful nasty Flash. It’s great when you want to watch a video, but all the ******* ads that I see lurching around the screens when I walk through the labs makes me pity all the folks who don’t know that it’s an option. As the developer, Wolf Rentzch says, “The web is so much better without Flash.” He’s right.
So, with that, read about and (on your Mac, anyway) install ClickToFlash. From the website:
Ever wanted to get rid of the scourge of the web that is Adobe Flash, but still retain the ability to view Flash whenever you want? With ClickToFlash, you can! Using ClickToFlash, all of those icky Flash bits that have infected most webpages on the internets are replaced with a nice, smooth gradient and the word “Flash” set in a nice, pleasing font. When you want to view the Flash, just click on it!
The advantages of ClickToFlash are numerous. Since Flash isn’t loaded until you specifically ask for it, your CPU usage will stay at normal levels when browsing the web. This has tons of benefits: web browsing stays speedy, your Mac laptop won’t get as hot, and your Mac’s fan won’t come on as often. In fact, we guarantee* that ClickToFlash will quintuple your battery life and that it will protect those precious parts of your body on which you rest your laptop! (* note: not actually guaranteed)
Although similar to Flashblock for Firefox and Camino, ClickToFlash offers features over and above what Flashblock offers, and it offers them for Safari. Best among them, ClickToFlash supports viewing all those ADORABLE meowing cat videos, annoying dog videos, and hilarious rickrolls from YouTube without using Flash at all! That’s because YouTube also offers H.264 videos, which are used when viewing YouTube on the iPhone. With ClickToFlash, you get access to those same, higher quality videos.
Come join us! The web is so much better without Flash.
via
ClickToFlash.
flash,
freeware
October 8, 2009 at 3:43 pm Comments (0)
Filed under Free Stuff, Mac OS, QuickTime by Tim Merritt

Megabyte Computing offers a QuickTime X Preference Pane, adding some options back to the interface that Snow Leopard, a.k.a. OS X 10.6, removed. I’ve asked the developers for more information and hope to hear back from them soon.
September 8, 2009 at 2:21 pm Comments (0)
Filed under DVD, DVD Authoring, iMovie, Mac OS, QuickTime, Video by Tim Merritt

I didn’t know about these nice tricks.
- Add locations to Maps in iMovie
- Extra Keyboard-plus-mouse shortcuts
- Change clip speed
- Smart titles, maps, and photos
July 24, 2009 at 1:40 pm Comments (0)
Filed under Free Stuff, Mac OS, Security, Switching to Mac by Tim Merritt

Mothers Ruin Software gives us Suspicious Package for seeing what a pkg installer file will put on your system before you run it. A nice idea. Via.
install,
Mac OS X,
pkg
July 20, 2009 at 5:01 pm Comments (0)
Filed under DVD Authoring, Final Cut Pro, Mac OS, Video by Tim Merritt

Digital Media Net’s Heath McKnight explains how and why to set up a Qmaster Cluster for use with Compressor. I assumed it only worked on networked computers, but you’ll need it if you have a multi-processor Mac—which is most Macs today. This is a good catch. Glad I found it.
fcp,
Final Cut Pro,
qmaster
June 15, 2009 at 2:08 pm Comments (0)
Filed under Instructional Video, Mac OS, QuickTime by Tim Merritt

This is nice:
Catch the action taking place on your screen with screen recording. Start recording and QuickTime Player captures the activity on your screen and creates a movie file. It’s perfect for creating instructional media or when you need more than a simple screen shot.
Via
Daring Fireball.
June 8, 2009 at 7:25 pm Comments (0)