software
A Rotten Apple™ ?
Dec 10th
So I have a bone to pick with Apple’s design user-experience department:
In OS X 10.4 Tiger, when you brought up the ‘Get Info‘ dialog box when a file was selected, it gave the option to preview the file. If the file happened to be an audio or video file, a seek-bar showed up with the controls to play or pause the preview – but it also allowed you to arbitrarily select any point in the file and continue the preview from there. This seems like a great feature (it was) and it really allowed you to quickly get a grasp on the entire contents of a 10-minute song in just a few seconds by allowing you to jump to the location within the file that you were listening for.
Then, between OS X 10.4 Tiger and OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, something changed. (I’ll admit, I skipped 10.5 Leopard, so this change may have happened in Leopard and not Snow Leopard). Now, in Snow Leopard the seek-bar from Tiger has been replaced by what I’ll call a round preview ‘clock button‘ for lack of a better term. You press the circular ‘play‘ button and it displays the progress through the file as a circular ring that wraps around the button.

Wow, still a great visual indicator of the progress through the file, arguably more visually appealing, and arguably more space-saving – how can’t this possibly be anything but a step forward for one of the tech industries most famous innovators? Well, here’s where I have a bone to pick; when they switched from the quicktime seek-bar to the ‘clock button‘ style, they forgot to add in the functionality that would let you arbitrarily seek through the file. Now you can only listen to it from the beginning, or stop the preview. Hardly as intuitive as the solution they already had, and quite a step backward, forcing me to launch a media-playing program to skim through a folder full of files to find the correct one to…open in a media-playing program to enjoy it.
Please Apple, cut out the rotten bits and let us enjoy the rest of what you have to offer. I could understand if this was your first attempt at a preview dialog, but to remove already-existing functionality and fail to present any newer functionality just seems like a big mistake to me. So tell me, how does this Apple taste to you?
—Tom
tomhodgins’ magnificent music-box
Dec 6th
Hi everybody, I found a neat little script that would let me easily ad a web interface for a folder full of MP3’s I like to listen to wherever I am, so now you can too!
Most of the music here is non-copyright and occasionally there will be copyrighted stuff there, but only that which the original artist has allowed to be redistributed. Click on the picture below to enjoy!
–Tom
how to turn websites into OS X Applications
Dec 4th
So you have a few favorite websites (like this one of course) and you run OS X, and want to turn the website into an application you can put on your desktop, or your dock for easier access. Luckily there’s an app called Fluid that will help you do this!
Watch the video below and see how I used Fluid to make an app out of Dailybooth.com and Facebook.com.
NOTE: for our windows-using friends, I’ve been told that Google Chrome has this ability directly from within the browser! I’ve tried it with Chrome and it works! Also, check out Mozilla Prism which tries to do the same thing but with Mozilla’s products!

