Federico Viticci

10791 posts on MacStories since April 2009

Federico is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of MacStories, where he writes about Apple with a focus on apps, developers, iPad, and iOS productivity. He founded MacStories in April 2009 and has been writing about Apple since. Federico is also the co-host of AppStories, a weekly podcast exploring the world of apps, Unwind, a fun exploration of media and more, and NPC: Next Portable Console, a show about portable gaming and the handheld revolution.

This Week's Sponsor:

BetterTouchTool

Now with a Powerful Launcher for Your Mac


Arq Winners Announced

Thanks everyone who entered the Arq giveaway. Also, I’d like to thank Haystack Software for the 10 licenses he gave to MacStories.

Here are the names of the winners:

Justin

Keir

CannonGod

Shadowchaser

Pattulus

Fabio

Bruna

Mark Hewitt

SuperGlide

jaryre

You’ll receive the theme in your inbox in a few hours.

Cheers!





Pixelmator 1.5.1 Is Now Available, 1.6 “Nucleus” In the Works

Pixelmator has been updated to 1.5.1. Here’s the changelog:

  • Brush Collections;
  • Fit Images and Crop Images Automator Actions;

  • Move to Applications dialog;

  • A tiny Dock menu;

  • The ability to change the background color of the work area;

  • Many more tiny improvements and important bug fixes

From the same blog post:

“The entire Pixelmator Team is getting to work on Pixelmator 1.6 Nucleus, and it is going very well.”


TaskMate: Minimal, Simple, Uncluttered To-Do List

You hate Things, you can’t stand The Hit List, you don’t want to use a web based application. You want minimalism in your GTD app. Or maybe, you just want a simple to-do list application, because that’s how you get things done.

TaskMate by Ryan Conway is a straightforward Mac app that lets you enter tasks, delete them and mark them as complete. Nothing more, just checkboxes.

TaskMate Mac

TaskMate Mac

When Apple will bundle a Tasks.app with Mac OS X I’m sure it will be something like this.

Also, it’s free.



When the PC is a Toaster

Link

“Lots of the criticism around the iPad mimics the same criticism that Apple faced with the introduction of Macintosh. Macintosh was the first computer of the era to not ship with a programming language. For the enthusiast of the time, it was a huge issue. For the consumers, the inclusion of MacWrite and MacPaint was far more valuable and useful.”


iDocument: A Better Way To Organize Your Documents

Have you ever felt the need of collecting data into one single application? I have. To tell the truth, sometimes I wish there was an application that could collect everything (links,images, videos, music, documents) into a single interface, but I recognize that might end up being a nothing more than HD.app. So, here come database driven applications like iPhoto for images, iTunes for music or Yojimbo for..anything else. You should how much I love Yojimbo (here’s my post of some months ago about it) and you should also know how much I wish the developers of Yojimbo listened to the users. Yojimbo it’s great, but as you keep using it you realize it’s somehow outdated. Bookmarklets work fine, the Quick Input panel is useful, same applies for the Drop Dock…but it’s not fluid. Particularly after many months of serious usage, my installation of Yojimbo is starting to fall under the huge amount of data I’ve put into it. So I’ve come to a conclusion: certain file types must go elsewhere. I hence decided that documents, in the form of .PDFs and iWork files, should have been stored into another app. But that wasn’t easy you know: I wasn’t able to find an app that was exactly meant for collecting documents or at least, I wasn’t able to find the right app for me.

fast forward 30 days

iDocument totally came out of nothing. A follower of mine replied to me on Twitter saying “Hey, check out this app!”, and there I opened the link. Is iDocument really worth your money? Or, can iDocument really save you from those hundreds of documents cluttering you hard drive?

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