Posted by: in Productivity
Filed under: Utilities, Macintosh, Linux, Productivity, Apple, Open Source, Canonical
Theming one’s OS to look like a Mac is all the rage these days, but for the most part such modifications are superficial. However, Global Menu actually changes the user experience quite a bit. For those who haven’t seen a Mac before, [do such people exist?] on Mac OS, the menu for applications is located in a bar at the top of the screen, rather than the top of the window, like in Windows and Gnome.
With Global Menu, and a easy GTK hack, one can get the same interface on GNOME. It lets you use their computer differently, and yes, it makes your OSX themes more authentic. We’ve been using it for about three weeks now, and it is pretty nice. It all comes down to the individual’s preferences, and that’s what Linux is about, after all.
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Posted by: in Productivity
Filed under: Utilities, Macintosh, Windows Mobile, Productivity
Back in November, we posted about SyncMate, a freeware (for now) substitute for syncing Windows Mobile 5 and 6 devices with a Mac, especially Macs running OS X 10.5 Leopard. Well, the program looked promising, but proved to be buggy and difficult to adequately use.
However, SyncMate has continued to evolve over the last couple of months and Eltima software recently released a new release candidate build that’s free to download and use. We very, very basically tested the program with a friend’s T-Mobile Shadow (the HTC Juno) on our Mac running Leopard 10.5.2 and were successfully able to sync contacts and our iCal calendar. We didn’t try to do anything with iTunes or iPhoto synching, nor did we play with any of the SMS management tools listed on the SyncMate feature list but synching our contacts and calendar was pretty straight forward.
For Mac users, finding consistent support for Windows Mobile devices remains problematic. While programs like Missing Sync and PocketMac have improved their Leopard support considerably, each new OS update brings its own set of problems (and that’s without even discussing some of the Entourage 2008 issues that some Windows Mobile users, and Blackberry users, have been facing). Obviously native support would be the ideal solution (ha!), but until then, it is good to have different options.
SyncMate might not be perfect, but it continues to improve and the developers are actively seeking user feedback. And at least during the continued beta, and now release candidate phase, the program is free (we’re not sure what the pricing situation will be once SyncMate gets its first full release). If you have a Windows Mobile 5 o 6 device and are running OS X 10.4 or higher, give SyncMate a shot.
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