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David’s Top Shareware and Freeware Picks

Quick Scan

Adium - Imstant message app that handle many IM networks at once.

Delicious Library - Visual catalog of your books, movies, music, and video games. Super easy to use.

Firefox - Excellent web browser with tons of add-ons for customization.

VLC Media Player - Handles way more file formats than QuickTime.

David's Top Shareware and Freeware Picks for New Mac Users

Previously I wrote about what makes a programs a shareware or freeware application and why they should be of interest to you. Now let's take a look at a few of my favorites, which also happen to be some of the most popular and best reviewed apps out there.

Adium - Multiple Network Instant Messaging - FREE
If you don't need iChat's voice and video chat features, Adium is simply the best instant messenger client that you can get. It supports a wide variety of services, including AIM, MSN Messenger, Yahoo! Messenger, ICQ, Jabber (with special support for Gtalk), and many others. If you have multiple IM accounts (as I do), this is a godsend simply for the fact that you can use one program for all of your instant messaging needs.

There is an immense body of extensions that you can download; most of them simply change Adium's look and feel, though some add new functionality such as adding other protocols to the app. My favorite? A plugin that replaces the default Dock icon with a picture of Hobbes from Calvin & Hobbes. Adium is based on libpurple, which was originally created for the popular Windows chat client Pidgin. If you've used Pidgin on Windows, Adium duplicates much of the same functionality.

There are some caveats, however. As mentioned above, there is no voice or video chat. Also, there are some issues with file transfers using Adium—they may be slow or not work at all. But most issues are constantly worked out over time, and improvements are continually being made.

Delicious Library - Visual Library Cataloging - $40

If you're like me, you have a large collection of books and you frequently lend them out to your friends. Faithful use of the Apple Design Award-winning Delicious Library helps ensure that you get your books back, and that you'll never forget which books you own. Not only that, but it provides a great way to visualize your library at a glance.

Delicious Library Window

One of the coolest features of this app is the iSight support: if you have an iSight, all you need to do in order to add a book to your Delicious Library is to hold up the bar code to your iSight (the one on the book, not the sticker many bookstores put on for their own inventory management). If Delicious Library can read the bar code (and it can, well over 99% of the time), it will try to look up details such as the title and author on Amazon.com. If not, you can enter the ISBN number with the keyboard or enter details yourself.

Once in your library, you can enter your own personal review, assign a rating from zero to five stars, make a note of its location in your physical library, and check it out to person by dragging it straight to their name in a list of borrowers.

Delicious Library 2.0 should ship on the same date as Leopard, and Wil Shipley (developer and CEO of Delicious Monster) has promised two things: that Delicious Library 2.0 will be awesome (DL 2.0 is already an Apple Design Award winner and hasn't even been released yet!), and that it will require Leopard to run. Please remember that Delicious Library is limited to twenty-five items in its library until you pay the $40 license fee. This makes trying it out a no-brainer.

Firefox - Web Browser - FREE
Firefox is one of the crown jewels of open source software development. Many of those "in the know" swear it's the best browser on Windows, and many who use it on Mac OS X swear by it as well. I personally use Safari for most of my web browsing needs, but when it comes to writing web software and web pages, Firefox has no competition. There are thousands of extensions to Firefox available, some of which merely change the look of the program, and others of which add useful functionality. My personal favorite is one called "Web Developer" which has many helpful aids to those writing web pages.

Firefox is also an excellent "second browser" in my experience, because some Web pages that still won't load in Safari will work just fine with Firefox. Particularly useful is the fact that Firefox will automatically load your bookmarks from Safari. And some features in Safari 3, such as the ability to reload your web pages in the event that your browser crashes, were available in Firefox first.

VLC Media Player - FREE
As good as QuickTime Player is, there are still some types of video files that it just can't play—AVIs are a particular cause of frustration. In these cases, VLC is indispensable as it plays just about any video file that you can throw at it. The only video file that has ever given it trouble is video that has been encrypted with Microsoft's Windows Media digital rights management.

As with Safari and Firefox, full-screen playback was available in VLC before it was made available in the free version of QuickTime Player. MPlayer is a competing video player that is also quite good, though I have always personally preferred VLC. Expect the upcoming review of VLC to also include MPlayer because both are worthy of recommendation.


Have you found some great Shareware and Freeware apps? Let us know in the Comments section below!


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Delicious Library

Adium

Firefox

Favorite Firefox Add-ons  

VLC Media Player

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Your Comments:

I endorse that. I used to think TextEdit only did 99% of what I wanted a word processor to do. Then I saw this tutorial:

http://www.macworld.com/2007/08/secrets/...

Now I know it can do 100%!


 Arvid
 08/27/2007  at  06:55 PM

Shadowclipboard, Preview, Camino, PopCharX, Windowshade, FruitMenu, Skype and WeatherDock. I use these many times a day.


 Roger
 08/27/2007  at  07:43 PM

Arvid - the URL was interesting. A large part of my work is editing. What I would like to be able to do is apply styles, such as strikeout and red with a keyboard shortcut. Having to mouse up to the styles popup every time I want to do this is distracting. My hands are on the keyboard, so I would like to do everything from the keyboard if possible. I wondered if I could do it with Applescript, but there doesn't seem to be anything in the dictionary for this. You can do this with MarinerWrite, but that app is getting really long in the tooth and desperately needs an upgrade.

Yours sincerely,

John Davis


 John Davis
 08/27/2007  at  10:31 PM

Another one I can't do without is TypeIt4Me. It's a wonderful way to speed up typing if you do a lot of text work. I've made a kind of shorthand using this. "g" "im" "usa" followed by a space or punctuation mark (set in preferences) expand to "going to," "I'm," "U.S.A." This saves so much time. I can type pretty well at the speed of speech using this. The developer is very responsive. I thoroughly recommend it.

John Davis


 John Davis
 08/27/2007  at  10:36 PM

One of those websites I've come to quite enjoy browsing lately is http://osx.iusethis.com/. It's great to see what other people are using and gets you set in a whole direction of finding freeware/software.

I'm a Delicious Library user but one alternative (free might I add) that I found was http://books.aetherial.net/wordpress/
seems to work really well for organizing comics..

If you're in the market for shareware and have the patience to wait there are always good deals popping up on http://www.maczot.com and http://www.mupromo.com . There are also occasional Mac shareware bundles that get released that are worth it.


 Donna
 08/29/2007  at  08:08 PM

p.s. btw - two apps I cant live without
AppFresh (interacts with iusethis.com as well as keeping track of updates)

AppCleaner - Uninstall app for those who are out of control when finding shareware/freeware (like yours truly)

There is also AppTrap - the extension to Trash Can that apple should have thought of (throw away an app and it trashed your prefs as well)


 Donna
 08/29/2007  at  08:15 PM

I'm utterly surprised Quicksilver hasn't been even mentioned.

About Firefox, it can open anything. Safari can't.


 Dario
 08/31/2007  at  11:58 AM

I too am in the Safari only camp, and now that I found a place to get plugins for Safari (such as an adblocker) I have even less reason to use Firefox.

My must haves for OS X are:
Perian: The new version turns Quicktime into a silver bullet for video files, hello MKV in Front Row!
Appfresh: Keeps track of all the apps on your machine so you can keep them all up to date from one place
AppZapper: Eliminates every trace of an app if you want to delete it, even the installer if you so choose
XSlimmer: Removes PPC or Intel code from UBs as well as extraneous languages. Most Apple made apps get reduced by 50% or more, great for saving some space and makes apps load faster


 Stuart
 10/01/2007  at  03:02 AM

Quicksilver is a great app. I have just used it in the past as an application launcher even though it can do more. For me, once the new mac os comes out Im not sure if I will need quicksilver.


 Darrin
 10/01/2007  at  07:02 AM

Has no one here heard of OpenOffice? Or the NeoOffice <http://www.neooffice.org/neojava/en/index.php> port of OpenOffice that runs natively in aqua? Jeez if you think that HORRID TextEdit abomination makes up for MS Word, you need to check NeoOffice out. It is a free office suite that has a wordProcessor, spreadSheet, dataBase, powerPoint replacement, and drawing app. It even has more options than MS Office for many things. I will never pay for Office again.


 xguse
 10/18/2007  at  06:28 PM

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