Daylite: the ultimate Mac app for your productivity

The first time I tried Daylite.app for Mac it seemed too complex to me: I thought that  it was surely very useful for teams of 20-30 people and more, but to me, a single blogger without any sort of team, it was just too stuff in one single window. Then, one of my Twitter followers said  ”What? You don’t use Daylite? Go try it!” and I decided that it should get another chance.

It was worth of it.

Daylite is a business productivity manager designed to help you manage you business, either if you are a single or a team. It has got features like Projects, Calendars, Tasks, Notes and Contacts: basically, everything you would ever need to organize your business “the Mac way”.

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Stainless browser: want Google Chrome on Mac?

Google Chrome, what a great browser. Fast, simple, sleek interface: you could say it’s a Mac app. Unfortunately, Google Chrome is available only on Windows and we should be able to get the Mac version this fall.

But there’s still a chance to have Google Chrome run under Leopard, and it’s not Chromium. Have you ever heard of Stainless?

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Webbla: Visually Organize your Bookmarks.

How many hours have you ever spent looking for that tutorial you know you have bookmarked three months ago?

A lot, I guess. Well, this is beacuse bookmarks have become too important, they’re the only way we can store websites permanently (I mean, we can’t leave open tabs for 200 websites) being sure that we’ll “find that tutorial” again in the future.

What if we can store all of our boomarked websites in a single desktop application?

Let’s talk about Webbla.

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Roundup: The Ultimate Mac Browsers List of 2009

As Web 3.0 is  becoming reality, browsers are gaining a great importance: browsers are our first interface, the one we use every single day to explore the Web.

2008 has been a great year for the so-called Browser War: back in September, when Google launched Chrome, its official browser, there was a very interesting debate wether Firefox was still “the best alternative browser” (Internet Explorer is the most used browser, until now)  which saw the community split in three: Firefox, Chrome and Safari, our native Mac browser.

Despite these three big names, there are dozens of less known apps, surely worth a try, which I’d like to talk about .

So, here’s MacStories Mac Browsers Roundup, May 2009 Edition.
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