Stay Signed In
Do you want to access your site more quickly on this computer? Check this box, and your username and password will be remembered for two weeks. Click logout to turn this off.
Stay Safe
Do not check this box if you are using a public computer. You don't want anyone seeing your personal info or messing with your site.
AddMovie is a utility for concatenating several files into one single QuickTime movie.
Supports various input file formats, including, of course, QuickTime movies.
asy iWeb Publisher is a free application for Mac users without .mac subscriptions that makes it easy to upload sites created with iWeb to any web host by just dragging and dropping.
It basically searches and puts all your apps in alphabetical order. You can also manually choose which apps you Don't want on the list.
So everything's fine, as long as you can remember the icon of your app
Perian is basically a "free, open source QuickTime® component that adds native support for many popular video formats" (according to the website). it's just a package of codecs that allows QT to play previously unsupported formats. just follow the simple instructions on the website for installation. in my hands perian has been invaluable for enabling QT playback of various videos that it previously could not handle. but VLC is still the most versatile media player out there for the mac.
HandBrake is a GPL'd multiplatform, multithreaded DVD to MPEG-4 ripper/converter. HandBrake was originally available on the BeOS, but now has been ported over to MacOS X and to GNU/Linux.
* Supported sources:
o Any DVD-like source: VIDEO_TS folder, DVD image or real DVD (even encrypted)
o PAL or NTSC
o AC-3, LPCM or MPEG audio tracks
* Outputs:
o File format: MP4, AVI or OGM
o Video: MPEG-4 or H.264 (1 or 2 passes or constant quantizer encoding)
o Audio: AAC, MP3, Vorbis or AC-3 pass-through (supports encoding of several audio tracks)
* Misc. features:
o Chapter selection
o Basic subtitle support (burned into the picture)
o Integrated bitrate calculator
o Picture
Does the Finder have too few features for your liking? Does it offer too little information? Xfolders, the new file manager for Mac OS X, Tiger, is the solution. Xfolders supplements the Finder and it is, thanks to its compatability with Norton Commander, an effective assistant for administrating your files.
Features:
- Completely rewritten for Tiger Cocoa application.
- Uses the new technology of Mac OS X Tiger.
- Full integration of the Finder, thus offers support for all file operations to and from the Finder.
- Drag and drop between both filelists and the Finder.
- Support for all important file operations.
- Info dialog for simple changing of file and folder attributes.
- Intelligent path navigators for file lists.
- Bookmarks and manager for folders.
- Direct access to importend system utilities.
- Navigation with the keyboard, as in Norton Commander.
- Integrated, detailed Spotlight search.
- Integrated image browser.
- Integrated terminal.
- Versatile search and compare possibilities.
- Zip archive support.
- Flat or 3D Unified look.
- Support for English, German, Italian, French, and Spanish.
- Optimized for the PowerPC G5 processor, but remains compatible with G3 and G4 processors!
- Universal binary: Compatible with Intel-based Macs!
- Xfolders is freeware!
Why do I need an uninstaller in Mac OS X? Programs in Mac OS X are creating lots of files and folders during their installation (like user preferences, temporary files, log-files, …). If you are going to delete a program from within the Finder, all these data will remain on your hard drive, and wastes precious space. So far, CleanApp has found associated files and folders by an identifier-key, and offered them for deletion. Indeed, corresponding files could not be found without this identifier-key. Up to now!
Version 2.0 of CleanApp now offers a revolutionary new journaling-tool, that makes it possible to track and remove all associated files of programs, without any exceptions. This makes CleanApp the best solution to completely remove applications from your Mac OS X, or to archive it for later use. Many more features.
What’s New in this Version
- optimized logging service requires considerably less memory
- minor bug fixes
Fetch Art will allow you to automatically download album art for your music in iTunes. It uses album art from Amazon.com, and the ID3 tags in your MP3 files to determine the appropriate CD cover to download. If your ID3 tags are incorrect or incomplete, you may not get any art for that song, and occasionally will actually get the wrong art as it was unable to correctly find the album on Amazon.
Onyx is a utility for maintenance, optimization, and personalization for Mac OS X. It also makes it possible to configure certain hidden parameters of Finder and the Dock and to remove certain files such as cache files and performs maintenance routines, many other functions.
What's New:-
[li]No Help.[/li]
[li]No localization (french and english only)[/li]
[li]No installer[/li]
[li]Useless functions have been removed[/li]
[li]To show the EasterEgg, click at the bottom and the left in the main window.[/li]
Sidenote tries to catch the "Stickies" spirit but in the form of a multi-document drawer that will hide in the corner of your screen (left or right). You can use it to take all your daily notes, include images and easily modify text color and font. Sidenote will automatically expand so that you will be able to drag into it any picture, text clipping or pdf file from the finder or your favorite application. Sporting notes auto-saving, you'll never have to save your notes. Sidenote will handle that for you. You can also print them or export them to rtf.
AppleJack is a user friendly troubleshooting assistant for Mac OS X. With AppleJack you can troubleshoot a computer even if you can't load the GUI, or don't have a startup CD handy. AppleJack runs in Single User Mode and is menu-based for ease of use.
Using AppleJack, you can repair your disk, repair permissions, validate the system's preference files, and get rid of possibly corrupted cache files. In most cases, these operations can help get your machine back on track. The important thing is that you don't need another startup disk with you. All you need to do is restart in Single User Mode (SUM), by holding down the command and s keys at startup, and then typing applejack, or applejack auto (which will run through all the tasks automatically), or applejack auto restart (which will also restart the computer automatically at the end of the process).
What's New:
* fixed deep cache cleaning under Tiger to respect the new cache file names for launch services and user icons.
* improved the disk repair routine messaging, and implemented a limit for how many times disk repair is repeated on an irreparably damaged disk in auto mode.
* expanded some of the preference file checking to include .xml file extensions as well as the old (deprecated, but still in use) /var/db/SystemConfiguration directory.
* removed 'SystemStarter start Disks' from the setup sequence of AppleJack for people running Tiger. Evidently, it's not necessary anymore.