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Mac Starters Guide?
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 12:02 am
by Turbanator
With the recent price drops and the launch of new entry level products like the Mac Mini, the mac community is growing faster than ever I'm sure you'll all agree.
The majority of people converting to mac will be a little dazed and confused with not really knowing where to start. Does anyone know of a good starters guide which makes recommendations and information for new beginners?
What apps do you all recommend for everyday use, I still use Safari for my web, I use webmail mainly so don't need a pop3 client and I use Adium for messenging. Ontop of all that, the iLife, Adobe Creative Suite and Mac Office Suite are all essential to me... how about you?
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 6:56 am
by Canis
My dock has:
Quicken
Pages (Apple's word processor)
iCal
Mail
Safari
Address Book
Garage Band
iTunes
Acquisition
Asureus
iPhoto
Sherlock
Terminal
QuakeMenu (because the damn thing keeps crashing)
That's the brunt of what I do on this thing. So much for milking the power of my Dual 2.5GHz beast with all the trimmings...
As far as good starter's guides, the OS X for Dummies or O'reilley's OS X books are pretty good starting points. I've been using OS X since it came out, so I'm no expert on what is most helpful...
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 3:27 pm
by Zapchud the 2nd
My must-haves:
- Quicksilver (f) (Launcher, object-manipulator)
- OmniWeb (s) (Best. Browser. Evar.)
- Proteus (s) (Instant message client)
- VideoLAN Client (f) (Video playback)
- SubEthaEdit (f) (Code editor)
- Transmit (s) (FTP client)
(f) = freeware
(s) = shareware
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 6:15 pm
by NCG_Mike
I guess they do one of those "For Dummies" books on OSX. Dunno any free stuff though.
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 9:35 pm
by 4g3nt_Smith
Firefox (tried Camino, but it was a medicore mashup of FF and safari), Mail for Mail (tried Thunderbird, but it wouldn't intergrate into the OS like Mail did and didn't use the OS X address book) Transmit for FTP, adium for IM, Quicktime w/ plugins and a bit of VideoLAN for movies, itunes for Music and Audion for Webradio, Tomato torrent for torrents (since Azureus would cause kernel panics left and right)
The first thing you have to do when switching is throw out all those backwards ways of doing things in windows and start anew. If you don't know what something does, just try it. Most likely nothing bad will come of it, and if you try to do something bad, the OS will either not let you or warn you.
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 9:42 pm
by Canis
Why use audion for Webradio when iTunes has webradio as well and you also use iTunes for your music?
Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 10:44 pm
by 4g3nt_Smith
audion has more stations listed, as it goes and checks a master server somewhere. IN itunes, I have to find the stream somewhere and add it to my library, or stick with the 30 odd default ones most of which suck.
Posted: Fri Mar 25, 2005 10:50 am
by torq
These are my must-haves:
- Adium (f) (Instant message client)
- VideoLAN Client (f) (Video playback)
- SubEthaEdit (f) or TextWrangler (f) (Code editor)
- Transmit (s) (FTP client)
- Download Wizard (f) (Download manager for large downloads)
(f) = freeware
(s) = shareware
And yes, I paid for for Transmit and it's worth the money. For iPod users I also recommend Senuti (f), a tool to copy songs from iPods to the harddisks.
Posted: Mon May 02, 2005 6:08 pm
by nyxs-uk
i'm a switcher :icon31: with a mini and i also use a PC running fedora3 (linux). so the command line is the same as unix but with a free set of good application which come with os-x i find i don't really need to use the command line much except for ftp.
I use
iTunes
Safari
Mail
Aim
Quake3
Audacity (freeware)
qucktime
I chose the system to replace my dead hifi!
Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 2:38 pm
by saturn
i'm still in the progress of making me comfortable in Tiger, it's going pretty good.
I'm still doubting about Camino, it runs great, it's lean and mean, but it misses the extensions of Firefox. The OS X look is great.
Still looking for something that can replace ACDsee photo browser which I use extensively on the PC, but the Mac version is an abomination and an insult to Mac users.
Some nice tips here for programs. Gonna try a few.
Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 5:15 pm
by NCG_Mike
Okay, in my dock from left to right...
Finder (disabled)
PathFinder (I have a legal license too!)
System Preferences
Mail
Entourage (for HotMail)
Safari
NetNewsWire (I prefer it to Safari RSS)
XCode (naturally)
Interface Builder
CodeWarrior (just in case)
Shark
Terminal
Console
TextEdit
Remote Desktop Connection (so I don't have to sit near the Dull 2400)
Proteus (now redundant as I have iChat talking to MSN)
AthenaIRC (I'm old school)
iTunes
VLC
iChat
Photoshop CS
Virtual PC (sandbox)
Wolfenstein: ET
Doom 3
iPhoto
Forgot to add this, my latest app:
http://homepage.mac.com/only_mortal/scr ... raSpot.jpg
If you work in serious color management you should realize what it does. It's not only D50...
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:05 am
by Keep It Real
just use firefox for the internet, itunes for music. if you need anything else just search for it in google (mac ftp). why would you get dazed and confused using a different OS. Its really nothing different.
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 9:14 pm
by 4g3nt_Smith
Keep It Real wrote:just use firefox for the internet, itunes for music. if you need anything else just search for it in google (mac ftp). why would you get dazed and confused using a different OS. Its really nothing different.
aside from the fact FF sucks on OS X, the idiot's right for once.
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 9:35 pm
by Keep It Real
agent smith you faggot :lol:
i know it hurts your heart...
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 10:40 pm
by NCG_Mike
I don't think FireFox is bad on OSX, a bit goofy for sure, but not bad. I have it installed as a curiosity, though I only really use it on Windows to avoid the IE exploits.
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 11:20 pm
by saturn
Sometimes I use Firefox for the extensions like Bookmark Synchronizer, which will upload the bookmarks to a file on my webspace which I can download again to Firefox on my PC.
And to sync bookmarks between all the browsers on my mac (Safari, FF, Camino) I use BookIt.
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 11:28 pm
by NCG_Mike
I really used Safari on the Mac and do sync with .Mac to the PowerBook. It's just a shame the two Windows systems I have are incompatible.
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 11:34 pm
by saturn
p.s. I've found a program that will sync contact, calendar, tasks and files between Mac, PC and Linux.
Xchange Netwerk
http://www.xcnetwork.com/index.jsp
It's basically some sort of Exchange server and you can try it out for 30 days, after that you will have to pay a few hundred bucks

Posted: Fri Jul 01, 2005 4:07 am
by zeeko
i like firefox a bit better than safari, other than that i have, quickbooks, photoship elements, tomato torrent, keynote, xfactor, quickbooks pro, oggdrop. i would highly recommend not using limewire i've heard that it can be pretty nasty to your mac..