Four Mac Apps to Instantly Boost Your Productivity

I’ve already talked about my most useful IOS applications. Let’s move to the desktop and discuss a few apps that materially add to my flow and efficiency.  These apps increase my productivity and make my life easier, and they can do the same for you.

nobifLet’s start with one app that’s already on your Mac. Automator, which can be found the Applications folder, can automate repetitive tasks and save you a lot of time. For example, I created a process in Automator that automatically monitors a specified folder for image files, renames them to the convention I use for my blog, and resizes them to the desired size. Another service I created in Automator automatically combines selected PDF files with a right-click. Far too many people don’t use-or even know about Automator. That’s a shame, because it is possibly the single biggest timesaver on my Mac. And you don’t need to be a programmer to use it. You can set up all kinds of time saving processes by dragging and dropping.

A related app that I rely on heavily is Hazel, the automation program from Noodlesoft. While similar to Automator, Hazel is even more powerful and can automate an almost infinite number of tasks (it can also incorporate Automator into its actions). For example, as part of my paperless filing and storage system, Hazel monitors my Document Inbox folder for PDFs, converts them to searchable format, renames them based on their contents, and moves them to the appropriate folder. In other words, all I have to do to file my papers is scan the file, and Hazel does the rest.

Another efficiency boosting app is Bartender. It allows you to manage your Mac menu bar, and to arrange the resident applications in your desired order. The ability to reorder menu bar applications is well worth the $15, without consideration of all of the other useful Bartender features.

Probably my favorite new Mac app is Unclutter by Software Ambience Corp. Unclutter places a virtual storage shelf (they call it a digital pocket) at the top of your screen, where you can store clipboard contents, files and notes. Dropbox and iCloud integration allows you to sync this content across your various computers. This has become my go-to way to share individual files between my iMacs.

And, as a bonus app, there’s Dropbox. While Dropbox is awesome, just as a way to back up, sync and share files between desktops, laptops and mobile devices, its true power is its integration with and/or use beside other applications.  This allows you to create a lot of extremely powerful automations. For example, bills and other documents scanned at the farm are scanned into a folder monitored by Hazel. Upon receipt, Hazel moves the files into a specified Dropbox folder, where they are synced to my home computer. When they reach my home computer, the Hazel app on that computer performs the searchability, renaming and moving functions described above, to place the files in their permanent folder. Mostly all I do is scan them. I say mostly, because sometimes Hazel has a hard time figuring out what the document is, so it can appropriately rename it.  In that case, all I have to do is rename the files, after Hazel converts them to searchable format. Dropbox also integrates with the wonderful IFTTT, which allows a ton of automated flow.  For example, I use a combination of Dropbox and IFTTT to place automated farm rain logs, photos, locations and other entries in my DayOne journal.

All of this is like a giant erector set for adults.  Jump in, build something, create some free time.  I about to watch the Walking Dead with some of mine.

Tell me some of your favorite time savers.

Evening Reading: 3/14/14

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Google just tossed a (good for us kind of) bomb at other cloud services.  $1.99 per month for 100GB (previously $4.99) and $9.99 per month for 1TB (previously $49.99).

I’m looking forward to the return of Mad Men.  Speaking of which, here is a (new) review of my favorite episode so far.

One of the 3,000 reasons why Reddit is the best thing about the internet is IaMA, the place where people- many of the famous and/or interesting- answer questions.  One guy always asks the same question, and it is a great one (I’ve started asking it at important work meetings when someone goes on too long about something and then asks for questions).  “Would you rather fight one horse-size duck or a hundred duck size horses?”  Arnold Schwarzenegger gives a video demonstration (and confirms that he’s a pretty cool dude).

I wonder if Dave and Mike agree with this ranking of Australian breakfast cereal?  I just want a Vegemite sandwich.  Served by a strange lady who makes me nervous.

 

Who needs zombies?  Here is the real proof that the apocalypse is upon us.

Speaking of Reddit and IaMAs, Arthur Chu of Jeopardy fame is doing a very interesting one right now.

You’re only as old as you feel.

Agreed.  One of my favorite movies.  Along with Broken Flowers.

Guess I was the only one who “don’t need [his music player] around anyhow.”  Speaking of music, looks like my next Tundra could, in fact, have CarPlay.

Interesting read on how the Target data theft went down.

Evening Reading: 3/11/14

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OK, I have a new favorite podcast.  Mac Power Users.  If you have a Mac, you need to listen to all of these.  I’ve been binge listening.  If you still use a Windows machine, you also need to listen to all of these to help you understand what you’re missing.  Here’s the feed and the iTunes link.

This Flappy Bird cat is doing a great job of marketing.  Seriously.  Yes, I tried it.  My high score was 1, and it took me several attempts to set it.

All I can say is anyone who actually prefers iTunes radio to Spotify hasn’t used Spotify.  I love Apple, but pretty much everything about iTunes sucks.  If you like good music, here’s my primary curated Spotify playlist.

That’s not just the best holiday movie ever made, it’s also chock full of socialist dogma!

How to get rid of telemarketers.  Some dude called me the other day wanting to recommend stocks for me to buy.  Rather than engage him on the very legitimate question of who would buy a stock just because some stranger called him on the phone, I took a new approach.  He said he wanted to send me some “market recommendations.”  I said “what sort of market are we talking about?”  He said “the stock market?”  I asked “you mean cattle and pork and whatnot?”  He said “no, stocks of companies.”  I said “nah, man, that’s just for rich people.”  He actually laughed and said goodbye.  True story.

World Science U makes me happy.

Looks like Mac users will finally get updated Microsoft Office apps this year.  I really like Pages, but the corporate world runs on Office.

Evening Reading: 3/10/14

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Confessions of a Disgraced Crowdfunder.  I backed Instacube, and gave up on getting one many months ago.  Even if I do eventually get one, there’s little chance it won’t seem dated from the first use.  I don’t care anymore, but the excuse that “the product hasn’t shipped yet because the reality of hardware development is that hardware is hard,” is a load of crap.  Instacube sought $250K, and raised over $620K.  That was enough money to overcome a lot of “hard.”  Having said that, I have obtained a lot of really cool stuff via Kickstarter.  I’m sold on the platform, just not the excuses.

The only people who don’t want to kill all the feral hogs are city-dwelling yuppies who think they’re all like Babe.  They’re not.  They are extremely disruptive.  Here’s an app to help destroy as many as possible.

iOS 7.1 is here.  Macworld has more.  I can’t wait to use CarPlay.

On the other hand, Neil can keep his iPod substitute.  An iPhone man don’t need him around anyhow.

Interesting read on that kid who killed all those babies in Connecticut.  Even if that symphony of warning bells could have been missed or misinterpreted, to add a slew of accessible guns to the mix is stunningly idiotic.  But it’s not about gun control, either.  It comes down to obsession.  Guns are tools.  Like pliers.  Use guns and pliers for reasonable purposes?  No problem.  Obsess over guns or pliers, or cats?  Crazy.  Fill your house up with crazy people and accessible guns?  Insane.  This was a tragic storm of bad decisions.

Well, there are 29 places I still need to go see.  Lots of cool places on that list.

This is crap, because the implication is that divine intervention put those other people on there.  Again, I love God.  I just dislike about 80% of what human beings say about God.

One YouTube Channel to Rule the Soul

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YouTube has slowly but surely become the best music repository on the web.  Whenever I want to hear a song, YouTube is the first place I search.  This is especially true for live performances and older, harder to find songs.

 

Like classic soul.

Fortunately for the rest of us, there are people who find and curate wonderful channels full of good music.  My favorite is Soulhawk.  He/she has a vast and carefully assembled collection of classic soul music, much of which would otherwise remain in obscurity.  It is not unreasonable to declare Soulhawk’s YouTube channel an audio museum full of priceless treasures.

Enjoy!

Evening Reading: 3/7/14

The other day I posted the first photo I ever uploaded to Flickr.  Here’s the first digital photo I ever took.

first digital pic

30 Cult Movies Everyone Must See.  I’ve seen 17 of them.  Altered States and the Holy Grail are two of my all-time favorites.  The Warriors, Lost Boys, Night of the Living Dead and Rocky Horror are excellent.  Eraserhead is horrible.  People only claim to like it because somewhere along the way, it became cool to claim to like it.  Where is The Belly of an Architect on this list?

Speaking of awesome movies (the first one was on the list above), Sharknado 2 will be here on July 31!

Yet another reason why I dislike Bank of America.

Thank goodness for this.  Otherwise, my entire family (including me) would be goners.

Good.  I may lose my liberal card for saying this, but it’s a horse race between crazy people who harm kids and death row inmates for the group I have the least sympathy for.  Stated another way, were I to list the ways we should spend our time improving the earth, there would be a lot of things above helping those folks.

 

Evening Reading: 3/6/14

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OK, some of these are pretty funny.

The bad news on retirement.  On top of that, I think 300 is too low.

I’ve talked about flow before.  The related podcast is very, very interesting.  I have been aware of this concept/experience for a long time.  It’s good to see someone study it.  Here’s the podcast.

10 URLs That Every Google User Should Know.  Unfortunately, the one I want to use the most doesn’t work with Google Apps: “You are trying to access Inactive Account Manager from a Google Apps Account. Inactive Account Manager is only available for Google Accounts.

I just love WordPress.Com (where this blog is hosted).  Yesterday, Getty Images makes a lot of images free.  Today, WordPress enables easy embedding.

I can’t believe I’d never heard of sonder before.  It’s early, but I think this might be important.  I’ve been thinking about it.

sonder n. the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own—populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness—an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you’ll never know existed, in which you might appear only once, as an extra sipping coffee in the background, as a blur of traffic passing on the highway, as a lighted window at dusk.  (via Reddit, with what may be a really good example)

I think maybe it’s important to be a good extra.

The Sounds of Tech, Beta Version 1

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Well, I’ve tried before.  And bailed.  But it’s a new year, and what the hell.

Here’s the Beta Version 1 of what may or may not become the weekly Newsome.Org Sounds of Tech Podcast.  It’s an abbreviated episode, in which I talk a little about car audio and play a great old, obscure alt. country song.

This is very rough.  I’m still in the “let’s see how it goes” stage.  Recording with Garage Band, something I use a lot for music, was easy.  We’ll see how WordPress.Com handles podcasts.

Here’s the RSS feed.  If I don’t immediately bail, I’ll have an iTunes link later.

Evening Reading: 3/5/14

A friend lost her husband this week.  I saw this song on Reddit.  For all that have gone…

 

One of the things I have learned over the years is that if I buy a stock, the price will go down.  If I love an application, someone will kill it.  So when I started to really enjoy and rely on Zite, it was only a matter of time.  Flipboard is OK, but there’s something about having my preferred application nuked in the hopes of forcing me to become a Flipboard user that rubs me the wrong way.  TechHive has more on the likely results of this acquisition.

While I will miss Zite, I wouldn’t miss optical drives at all.  I can’t remember the last time I loaded a DVD on a computer or a DVD player.

The SAT, like the times, is a changin’.

Speaking of things that I (at least used to) love whose days may be numbered.  I ported my mobile number to Google Voice years ago.  Google doesn’t seem to be doing much with it, which is never a good sign.  I also find that I use Google Voice less and less, because it still doesn’t fully integrate with my iPhone.  Would I do it again?  Probably not.

Run, hide, fight.  Sadly necessary advice.

16 Family Feud Answers That Caused Steve Harvey To Lose Faith In Humanity.  Cupine was priceless.

For those who disagree, I can only say that I am doing what I think is right. In the final analysis, I had to make a decision that I could be proud of — for me now, and my daughters’ judgment in the future.”  I wish more politicians would think and act this way.