The Best Mac OS X Software Tools
An anonymous reader writes "Mac advocate John C. Welch weighs in with his list of the top 20 Mac OS X products (except Welch manages to list 22). The collection of software tools ranges from the obvious, such as Boot Camp, to the obscure but perhaps more useful — little-known apps like Peter Borg's Lingon, for creating launchd configuration files. What's on your personal list of indispensable Mac productivity aids and programming tools? Also, do you think Welch gives too much air time to built-in OS X tools at the expense of third-party products such as NetworkLocation?"
Ecto
Transmit
Sync Services
BBEdit
Missing Sync for Windows Mobile
OmniGraffle Pro
ConceptDraw
iChat AV
AppleScript
Script Debugger
Microsoft Entourage
SketchFighter 4000 Alpha
TypeIt4Me
NetworkLocation
Apple Remote Desktop 3
MacLink Plus Deluxe
Parallels Desktop for Mac
Remote Desktop Connection
Snapz Pro X
Boot Camp
PDF
Lingon
Workgroup Manager
Track your TV Shows with your iPhone - FREE
What, 22 favourite apps and no Quicksilver? This is the one program I just could not live without, it is what makes my Mac usable. I hardly use the mouse anymore and access and/or run almost everything on my computer with two or three keystrokes. And it's free!
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Being a web developer who works from home, here's my short list of tools I like:
Web Developer Ext. for Mozilla: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/60/
MailTags: http://www.indev.ca/MailTags.html
FTP/SFTP Client: http://cyberduck.ch/
Text Editor: http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/
OpenOffice: http://porting.openoffice.org/mac/
Image Editor: http://www.macgimp.org/
Sugapablo
No textmate either! It certainly does everything the journo wants from BBEdit. And for LaTeX and Ruby it's utterly indispensable. I think it's the only shareware I've ever bought.
Or, just:
vi (built-in)
screen (built in)
apache (built-in)
ssh (built-in)
emacs (built-in)
and the list goes on.
It's my favorite *nix workstation. I don't wear an earring, drive a Jetta, or own a kayak, mountain bike or iPod.
I use Path Finder (http://www.cocoatech.com) every day, all during the day.
Can't imagine only having the Finder to use.
Dave Barnes 9 breweries within walking distance of my house
How on earth did he not include Onyx? I'd probably say its top 5... http://www.titanium.free.fr/pgs/english.html from the site: It allows you to run misc tasks of system maintenance, to configure certain hidden parameters of the Finder, Dock, Dashboard, Exposé, Safari, Login window and many Apple's applications, to delete cache, to remove a certain number of files and folders that may become cumbersome, to see the detailed info of your configuration, to preview the different logs and CrashReporter reports, to check the Preferences files and more. I would even go so far as to say it deserved to be number one...
Come on, who doesn't have menumeters? It's even free. Handy little tool to know the transfer rate of your network card.
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
Don't forget http://www.growl.info/ - just need to know a tiny bit of scripting and it's amazingly useful
A few things I personally couldn't live without that are missing from this list
* VoodooPad - for general note taking, todo lists, etc
* TextMate - self explanatory
* Camino - for web surfing
* Paparazzi! - for taking quick screenshots or thumbnails of web pages
* Colloquy - irc client
* twitterific - interface for twitter
* NetNewsWire - Feed reader
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