Best Tools for MAC

“When it comes to utilities and applications for my Mac, I must admit I’m a bit of a junkie.”

I’ll try lots of them, and toss them aside just as quickly as I come across them. But there are some that just seem to stick around. I absolutely love them, and can’t imagine my Mac-using life without them. Here is part one of my list of OS X apps I love:

Caffeine

If you work on a MacBook Pro, you no doubt have your LCD screen set to dim and turn off after a relatively short amount of inactivity in order to save battery charge. This is generally fine unless you’re doing a lot of reading or watching a DVD. Caffeine is a small application that lives in your menubar that solves this problem by preventing your screen from dimming and the computer from sleeping. A click of the coffee cup icon in the menubar prevents your computer from sleeping for a user-specified amount of time ranging from 15 minutes to 5 hours (or indefinitely). Caffeine is a free utility.

MailPlane

I’m a fan of Google’s free Gmail service, in fact I have more than one Gmail address – and each of those addresses has several other email addresses being forwarded to them. Apple’s built-in Maill app is great on the desktop, but I find it a bit clunky for laptop use – and I hate the webmail version. I use Mail on my desktop only as my main email app – and only use Gmail for reading on the road. Mailplane offers multiple account support, drag & drop image support, keyboard shortcuts, a menubar indicator, and a lot more in a simple-to-use desktop application. If you use Gmail heavily, the $24.95 is well worth it.

TextExpander

Apple built-in a text substitution service into Mac OS X Snow Leopard, but it’s really not very robust, and its features are limited. There are several similar applications available, but in my opinion TextExpander is the best. Allowing you to hit a few keys to expand into user-defined text and images can save a ton of time. I have to type the Graphic Mac web address quite a bit, so being able to simply hit the letter TGM and have it expand to the full URL of this site is a huge time saver. If you’re a web developer, writer, or simply type a lot of repetitive text, an app like TextExpander can save you a lot of typing for only $34.95.

Suitcase Fusion 3

My preferred font manager dates back into the early 90s. If you have a large font collection, you must have a good font manager, and I’ve stuck with Suitcase Fusion to do the job. Suitcase had a rocky start back in the day, but has seen many improvements over the years. Suitcase Fusion 3 offers stability, flexibility, font corruption checking, and a newly introduced feature called WebInk. WebInk allows you to use specific fonts in your HTML code – for beautiful web page design. There are other font management applications available, but I’ve found that Extensis keeps Suitcase Fusion up-to-date with new versions of Adobe Creative Suite for auto-font activation more so than other developers. And for large design firms, Extensis offers a server version as well. A single user license of Suitcase Fusion 3 will cost you $99.95.

Flip4Mac

Microsoft just won’t go away, and neither (apparently) will the Windows Media file format (.wmv). The Windows media file formats have never really worked very well on the Mac, and a few years ago Microsoft simply stopped making a plugin for Mac browsers to read the format at all. Thankfully, Flip4Mac came along and offered a way for Apple’s Quicktime app to read WMV files transparently right in Safari, Firefox, Chrome and more. Most WMV files look horrible, but if you absolutely need to view them, Flip4Mac does the job. Flip4Mac Player is free, but there are pro versions available that offer integration with Quicktime-enabled apps.

Perian

Speaking of media file formats not working with the Mac, there are a host of others besides WMV that don’t work. Like Flip4Mac, Perian strives to bring them to the Mac. Perian is an opensource software package that allows Apple’s Quicktime to display audio and video formats such as: AVI, DIVX, FLV, MKV, GVI, VP6, VFW, and a host of other video and audio formats. The beauty of Perian is that it’s all seamless – you never know it’s there. If you find yourself not being able to view or listen to files on web sites, you need to install Perian – which is absolutely free!

Default Folder X

For the most part, Apple has made a fantastic OS. But one aspect of the OS that has defied explanation for decades has been their refusal to improve the Open & Save dialog boxes. They just seem so “unhelpful.” I mentioned earlier that I’ve used Suitcase for many years. But the utility with the longest tenure on my Macs is definitely Default Folder by St. Clair Software. Default Folder does so much that I won’t even try to explain it all here. Needless to say, it improves Open & Save dialog boxes greatly with features that Apple should have built-in years ago. Among those features are the ability to set keyboard shortcuts to quickly switch to specific folders (which also work in the Finder – not just dialog boxes), view previews of files, set Spotlight tags for files, and much more. Default Folder X is the very first app I install on any new Mac I get – it’s the best $34.95 I’ve ever spent on a piece of software!

1Password

No software list for the Mac would be complete without mentioning 1Password. With virtually every website requiring you to log in with a username and password, keeping track of them all is a daunting task. 1Password does just that and more. 1Password not only remembers your passwords, but auto-fills them on the sites you visit as well. Along with usernames and passwords, 1Password can keep track of your purchasing information such as mailing address and credit card info. Another feature I’ve just begun using 1Password for is keeping track of software licenses and serial numbers. It offers easy entry of the info, plus the ability to attach license files, PDFs and other text files pertaining to the software I’ve purchased (receipts, etc.). 1Password works with virtually all major web browsers, and also offers an iPhone app. 1Password costs $59.95. It’s somewhat expensive, but it’s one of those apps you’ll wonder how you did without once you use it.

Default Folder X

Perhaps one of the longest tenured Mac OS utilities on the market isDefault Folder X. I’ve been using it since the Mac OS 8/9 days. Default Folder X enhances Open, Save and Place/Import/Export dialog boxes in a number of ways.

If you’re constantly saving things inside the same folder, Default Folder X can remember that folder for you. You can even set a different default folder for each application you use. You also have the ability to open or save to any Finder window with a single click; a feature I use often.

Default Folder X offers a plethora of dialog box enhancements

It also lets you get info on, rename, and delete existing files, putting the Finder’s power in every Open and Save dialog. Default Folder X remembers recently used folders, and assign keyboard shortcuts to them which are available not only in dialog boxes, but the Finder as well. And finally, you can add tags to your files, view file info and file previews (great for images), change permissions and view the Finder’s invisible files with a simple keystroke.

Default Folder X costs $34.95 and is worth every penny (there are numerous other features it brings that I didn’t even mention). It’s the first thing I install on any new Mac I buy. A demo is also available, and it runs on Mac OS X 10.4 and above.

Bettersnap Tool

BetterSnapTool allows you to easily manage your window positions and sizes by either dragging them to one of the screen's corners or to the top, left or right side of the screen. 

This enables you to easily maximize your windows, position them side by side or even resize them to quarters of the screen. 

Flycut

Flycut is a clean and simple clipboard manager for developers. It based on open source app called Jumpcut. Flycut is also open source: http://github.com/TermiT/flycut.I have tried some other clipboard managers. None of them are as good as this. With a great keyboard combination service built-in, you don’t have to mouse-over the icon in the menu bar and select a specific text item (that u copied or cut) from the pull-down menu. 

Nor do u have to select a specific key combination e.g.-"cmd-1" for first item or "cmd-2” for second item, instead u get a nice floating palette when u paste (default: shift-cmd-v) text on somewhere like a code editor or browser or any text related field. 

The palette shows a list-full of copied or cut text items that u had selected at some point of time. Using this is greatly convenient and cuts the need to switch between apps for porting text items back and forth each time the need arises. Instead, just cut or copy a bunch of text items so they all store in the clipboard chronologically thus freeing u from using paste operation each time through the process.

Display Menu

Display Menu shows a status item in your menu bar that lets you change your display settings with a single click. Depending on your display setup, you can set the screen resolution, toggle mirroring, and adjust the refresh rates.

You can enable additional features like Retina resolutions (on Retina Displays), AppleScript support, and resolution bookmarks as a paid upgrade.

After installing display Menu from the Mac App Store, you can find it in your Applications folder. Just start Display Menu either from there or by using Launchpad. Note that it will not start automatically after the installation. Once Display Menu is running, you can choose to have it automatically start when you log in by checking the 'start on login' option.

Air Display

Use Air Display  to turn your iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch into a wireless display for your computer. Increase your productivity with extra screen real estate or mirror your Mac or Windows computer display to your iOS device.

Air Display now connects up to 4 iPads simultaneously to create unique presentations.

Air Display consists of an iOS app and a separate free app that you install on your computer. Both your computer (Mac or Windows) and iOS client (iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch) must be on the same Wi-Fi network to use Air Display.Wirelessly connect to an iPad or Android device from your laptop to create the ultimate road-warrior workstation. Or repurpose any nearby Mac or Windows PC to give yourself more screen real estate for your main computer.