Filed under: Features, How-tos, Troubleshooting, Ask TUAW
Ask TUAW: GPS, Hamachi, student questions, and more
Wednesday is Ask TUAW time! This week we tackle questions on GPS solutions on the Mac, zero-configuration VPN with Hamachi, dealing with a slow starting Mac, as well as a couple of student questions on taking notes and using the Summarize Service, As always, please leave your own comments, and ask more questions for next week either in the comments to this post or using the tip form. Now let's turn to the questions.
Alex asks
I am looking into using my macbook as a gps device. I can find lots of GPS receivers, but not much software. I know about routebuddy but I am looking for something free, or opensource. There is a free program called GPSUtility, it will give you your latitude and longitude, but no maps. are there any free programs that will take this data and show me a map?
I think Roadnav more or less meets your desiderata. It's not pretty, but it does seem to work and it is open source.
Unfortunately, as you mention, the rather expensive RouteBuddy is probably the best option right now for Mac-based car navigation. If you were willing to spend a little cash there's the venerable MacGPS Pro
($49.99) and GPSy ($60). National Geographic also has some GPS mapping software that is Mac compatible. Since you're running a MacBook, you might also consider running a Windows package mapping package from Microsoft or DeLorme in Parallels. From what I've heard, a lot people running Mac carputers have turned to a Windows package.
Richard asks
I would like to VPN to my home network from my office. I have a WRT54G router and a static IP and I thought it would be easy, and actually made some progress, but I got nervous about the security of opening the file sharing ports on my main computer.
Fellow reader lokipo nails this one with his suggestion of Hamachi (free), which more or less completely automates the process of setting up a VPN. As the Hamachi site notes, it's "a zero-configuration virtual private networking application with an open security architecture and NAT-to-NAT traversal capabilities." The official Hamachi installation for OS X is a console package (i.e. command line). However, there is an unofficial graphical front end called HamachiX. Consult those pages, as well as the Instal on OSX wikipage and you should be able to do exactly what you want.
Aron asks
What is the best way to take lecture notes using my mac? I've been using the "word notebook" as it is the closest to what I want to do. However, office is so slow on rosetta - there has to be a template for pages or some other app that makes being a student easier.
Well obviously there's not single answer to this one; it's mostly a matter of personal preference. If you have a recent Mac you may find that it already has a copy of OmniOutliner which I regularly use for note making. (Check out these online video tutorials to get a sense of what you can do with OmniOutliner).
Once you start thinking about spending money, besides OmniOutliner ($25 for students ), there are a couple of Mac applications that take the notebook metaphor quite literally, Circus Ponies' NoteBook (above) and Aquamind's NoteTaker. Over at the academhack blog, you'll find a lot of praise for DEVONthink. You might find one of those useful. Other than that the list is nearly endless: Yojimbo (my favorite), Mori, Scrivener, SOHO Notes, etc. Just try some of them out and see how it goes.
Jon asks
My startup used to go very quickly but lately it's slowed down. At first I thought it was because of shapeshifter, so I deleted it. The startup time continues to get longer. I've heard of resetting RAM and other things like that. Would any of them help my startup time?
You're presumably thinking of resetting the PRAM, but that's probably not going to help (that was more of an old-school thing anyway). It may be connected with ShapeShifter, which may have left some things behind when you uninstalled it, since a skinning application like that has to work at a pretty low level. That said, however, what's probably happening is that you have a lot of applications set to start at login. So just to the Accounts Pane of the System Preferences. Click on the Login items tab and scan down the list. You may find a lot of things there you didn't intend to start up. Removing some of them will speed up your start up process. Be careful, however, you might find that you want/need some of them. Don't delete anything you don't know what is.

As a kind of test you could try creating a new account altogether and then start up into that account. If that starts up quickly, then you know the slowdown is in your user-space, and then it's just a matter of trying to track it down. It may also be helpful to open the Activity Monitor (in /Applications/Utilities) and scan down the list to see if anything sticks out, particularly anything using a great deal of memory.

Jonathan asks
I was randomly searching online articles for a paper in one of my courses and I found a summary service in the Safari > Services menu. I checked to see if websites had any info on the service and couldn't find much. Do you guys think it's a good, working tool? What's the best way to use it?
As a teacher of undergraduates my official response is: read your assignments! Unofficially, I don't use it much, but I know some folks swear by it. There's a MacBreak 62 video on this very thing. I'd just say play with it and see how well it works for you.



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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Rob said 9:34AM on 4-11-2007
For GPS greatness in OSX check out Grand High Wizard Software at http://ghw.spade-men.com. Their gpdsX, gps2geX and GPSRouteX are great programs!
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lee webb said 9:41AM on 4-11-2007
Aron could try using xPad for taking notes. It's free and would do the job just fine. Journler has more features and is also free.
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brian said 10:28AM on 4-11-2007
You came this close to pointing out a very important distinction for Jon. Is it system startup that takes a long time, or login? To help find out, he should turn off automatic login and see what's taking all the time--does it take a long time to get to the login window, or does it take a long time to get to the desktop once you've put in your name and password? Once he's done that, creating a second account as you described is a good way to gain additional perspective.
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john evers said 10:58AM on 4-11-2007
Good advice on the note-taking apps. I installed the trial version of all of these when searching for the perfect notes program for me. Ended up sticking with Circus Ponies Notebook. By far the easiest to use IMHO.
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Alejandro said 11:58AM on 4-11-2007
My system startup time has slowed down significantly.
Any tips on improving that?
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Kichigai Mentat said 11:15PM on 4-11-2007
As far as note taking, my advice is to use find something where speed is the key. I'm currently using Pages because I can generate a PDF and a table of contents, but the goofy keyboard short cuts and unusual menus are kind of off-putting.
For a while, I actually used a MediaWiki hosted internally to take notes. I could cross-reference things easily, do bulleted and numbered lists are easy, sectioning was a couple of ='s away, math formulas were pretty easy to accurately insert. The only thing that was tricky were diagrams and pictures. Other than that, I'd recommend running an internal Wiki as a quick solution.
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mkernan said 8:23PM on 4-11-2007
Is there any way that I can enable a keyboard lock on my computer?
Apple suggests setting a password on my screensaver and having a hot corner activate a screensaver, but then the problem is that every time I return from a screensaver, I have to authenticate myself.
I live in a dorm with 250 guys who are fans of pranking so I'm just thinking of something like a quick keystroke (maybe in Quicksilver?) or something that I can hit whenever I leave Macky in the study area.
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Kevin Vahlbusch said 3:48PM on 4-16-2007
Question -
Just the other day for seemingly no reason files (any kind) that I save or download to my desktop do not show up on the screen. They are in the finder under the "Desktop" and the path says they are on the desktop. However, I cannot see them... What is going on and how do I fix it?
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