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Filed under: Software, Internet Tools, Blogs

More ecto 3 details, a screenshot and roadmap revealed



Adriaan Tijsseling, developer of the Mac OS X version of the ecto blogging client, has been teasing us with sneak peeks and development details for some time now, but he's just posted another more revealing screenshot of ecto3, along with more details and a basic roadmap. Adriaan has touted ecto3 as a complete rewrite from v2, ushering in a new plug-in architecture that should make the app far more extensible.

Also on the notable changes list is the replacement of the rich text editor by Editable WebKit, a new, more WYSIWYG feature of the engine that is used to power Safari, many other browsers on Mac OS X and even HTML rendering in Apple Mail.

While Adriaan doesn't have any kind of ETA for a shipping version or even a beta just yet, it does sound like development is wrapping up well. Since support for different blogging platforms has moved to the plug-in format as well, he still has to build support for the latest Blogger (yes, it'll be in ecto3) and WordPress. As a final note, it's always nice to hear a developer using their own product, as Adriaan is using ecto3 "heavily" to try and catch as many bugs and problems as he can before unleashing it in one form or another on the masses.

Filed under: Software, Productivity, Internet Tools

BoxCloud: dead simple file sharing

Billing themselves as "dead simple file sharing for design and media professionals," BoxCloud seems to have a good thing going here. If you deal with a lot of clients and customers who simply aren't hip to FTP or other ways of transferring large files, BoxCloud offers a pretty simple, nay - dead simple - alternative. Featuring software clients for both Windows and Mac OS X (though when Download Squad found them last year they apparently offered a Linux client too), all you need is someone's email address to share a file of any size with them. Your lucky recipient, be they a client, friend, family member or co-worker, will receive an email with a link to download the file from your BoxCloud page. But herein lies the twist: BoxCloud doesn't host the file, so you aren't charged for space - your computer must be running BoxCloud's client, be on, and connected to the internet in order to share the file (i.e. - you host it). Their service plan then simply charges you for monthly bandwidth, not storage space, and plans start at 1GB/month for free, moving on up to 20GB for $9/month.

Sure, anyone who's domain + hosting savvy will scoff at this service, but anyone looking for brainless and painless file sharing might appreciate BoxCloud's simplicity. If you're interested, take their tour for more info on how simple sharing can be.

Filed under: iLife, Software, Cool tools, How-tos, Productivity, Internet Tools

iPhoto Mailer Patcher hack for iPhoto 5

If you aren't happy with the small selection of email clients that iPhoto 4/5 can export to, Hawk Wings has found a handy little applescript by the name of iPhoto Mailer Patcher that can add quite a few clients to the list. Mailsmith, Outlook Express, PowerMail and more can be set as iPhoto's default email client, with one exception: there's some extra work you'll have to go through to get this to work with iPhoto 5. Fortunately, it isn't hard work, so check out the Hawk Wings post for a short how-to. iPhoto 4 users, however, can skip ahead and simply use the applescript as is.

Filed under: Cool tools, Productivity, Odds and ends, Freeware

Easy project folder setup with Client Folder Maker

Client Folder Maker (CFM) is a handy applescript applet for those of you who repeatedly have to create standard folder structures for any kind of projects such as websites or design proofs for clients. The applet offers a simple UI for essentially creating a folder structure template, allowing you to list all the regular folders you might need. Building websites for clients? Create a folder structure list in CFM with folder names like I have pictured and you can simply run this applet to generate all the folders you need for each project, named according to whatever scheme best suits you. It's a handy little applet if you're doing any kind of repetitive work like this, and for the mere price of $0, how can you go wrong?

Tip of the Day

To get an instant map to any address, just go to your Address Book and right click on the address field of any one of your contacts and select "Map Of." The address will then be revealed in Google Maps on Safari. You can do the same if a data detector determines there is an address in an e-mail in Mail.


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