Thanks to Our Sponsor: SyncMate

Odds are, you have more devices laying around your house than ever before: a smartphone, most likely, along with, perhaps, an eReader, tablet, iPod, or gaming device. Keeping them all in sync is frustrating at best, impossible at worst. That’s where our sponsor this week, SyncMate, comes in.

SyncMate Free lets your Address Book and Calendar between your Macs, PCs, and mobile devices of all types: Windows Mobile phones, BlackBerry, Android (including the Kindle Fire), PSP, and more. You can even sync your online accounts, keeping everything synced between your Dropbox, Yahoo!, and iCloud accounts. You’ll also be able to view the messages on your mobile devices.

Then, with the Expert Edition, you can also sync iTunes media, iPhoto photos, notes, bookmarks, and sticky notes between all of your devices. You’ll also be able to sync folders in realtime between computers, and export text messages from your older Android, Windows Mobile, or Nokia phone. You’ll also be able to convert mobile media formats like .3GP to standard formats for newer devices. That might be just what you need to get everything moved from your old devices to a shiny new iPhone.

Go Get it!

Ready to make syncing all your devices simpler? Then you should go try out SyncMate. You can download the free version of SyncMate from their site, then upgrade to SyncMate Expert for $39.95 when you want more features. You can even get lifetime updates included for just $11.95 extra, if you’d like.

Think you’ve got a great app? Sign up for a Weekly Sponsorship slot just like this one.

    

Weekly Poll: Do You Prefer Purchasing Apps From the App Store?

It's been over 2 years — and two OS X releases — since the Mac App Store was launched on OS X Snow Leopard. In that time, it's become ubiquitous in the world of Mac Apps, and most new apps we try out and review are exclusively on the Mac App Store. In fact, a good number of the apps I use daily are exclusively on the Mac App Store.

For the most part, the App Store is a great addition to the Mac, making it easier for developers to sell apps and giving us a centralized place for users to find apps and get updates. But, it's not all perfect: there's restrictions to what App Store apps can do, and some developers have backtracked from switching to the App Store, moving new versions of their apps back to exclusive sale on their own site.

As app users, it's not too often that we get the choice of where to buy apps. If developers sell on the App Store, usually the app is only on the App Store, and otherwise, it's only on their own site. There are apps that are an exception, such as the Omni Group's apps, which are sold on both the App Store and on their own site.

That's why we're wondering: When you can choose, would you rather buy an app from the App Store or from developers' own sites? Fill out the poll, and let us know why you choose what you do in the comments below.

    

Thanks to Our March Sponsors

We’d like to say a special Thank you! to our weekly sponsors from March for sponsoring our site and for the great apps they make. If you would like to feature your app on our site with an advertisement, be sure to check out our available slots on BuySellAds or register for a weekly sponsorship for your app.

If you haven’t already checked out our the great apps that sponsored our site last month, be sure to check them out now!

Pagico

Most of us need to use several productivity apps every day: one for todos, one for notes and files, and maybe another for your projects and more. Having to switch back and forth between these separate apps is a drag: it’s hard to make connections between dots, and your data is scattered all over the place. Pagico is here to help.

Pagico is like GTD with data management capability – it not only manages tasks, but also notes and files. By neatly organizing everything by projects, you can have your vacation itineraries stored right next to restaurant menus, or action items right on top of meeting notes.

PassLocker

You know you shouldn’t use the same simple password on every site online, but password managers can be so complex to setup, not to mention expensive. Perhaps you should try out PassLocker which is a new take on a password management app.

PassLocker is a nicely designed menubar app that makes it dead-simple to generate random passwords for your online accounts and save your account info in one place. You won’t have to install any browser plugins to use it, and there’s no extra features or settings to make it complex. It’s just a simple way to manage your passwords.

Magic Mind

Do you find yourself looking for calming music or background sounds to make your day at work less stressful? Magic Mind is an app that can help you out.

You can choose from 28 background sounds, including thunder, crickets, birds and more, to help you relax while tuning out other background noises. You can custom mix sounds and adjust the volume of each individual sound to get it sounding just like you want.

Disklens

Spotlight is one of your Mac’s best built-in tools, letting you find apps, files, emails, and more in seconds. Once you try to dig deeper, though, you’ll quickly find Spotlight’s interface to be limiting. That’s where Disklens comes in. Disklens builds on Spotlight’s powerful search engine, adding a convenient user interface on top that’s aimed at maximum efficiency in the daily routine of locating information on your Mac. It’s Spotlight, supercharged.

And a special thanks to you, our Mac.AppStorm.net readers, for reading and sharing our articles. We couldn’t do it without you!

Think you’ve got a great app? Sign up for a Weekly Sponsorship slot and join the apps above.

    

Nimble Quest: A Classic Game of Following the Hero

Similar to the old arcade game Snake, Nimble Quest is a new game that lets you grow your train of characters, becoming stronger with each addition. Unlike Snake, though, where you created a huge, mutant reptile that roamed the arid arcade plains in search of food to fuel its ever increasing monstrous bulk, in Nimble Quest you’re creating a party of heroes and slaying baddies.

Is Nimble Quest a fun take on a classic or just a rip off of an old favorite? We’ll take a look and find out!

Get in Line

Whereas in Snake, you more or less just had to avoid obstacles and gobble up food to increase your length, in Nimble Quest you’re fighting monsters, too. You will be rewarded with a new hero after slaying certain enemies; bump up against the hero to add him or her onto the end of your conga line of courage. Be careful, though, because if you have a collision, you’ll lose a few of your noble fighters. If your party isn’t big enough, it’s game over.

I've got a pretty meager line, but I started out with just one hero.

I’ve got a pretty meager line, but I started out with just one hero.

Your party is always in motion, but you can control their trajectory with your arrow keys. Line up with an enemy or monster to start shooting, but be careful, because it may start shooting back. Attack damage is just as deadly as a collision, but your champions of virtue can probably take a few hits before they lay down in the dirt and wait for someone to call, “Bring out your dead,” and pile their bodies into a wagon.

The Nimble Quest heroes all have different perks. Some have boosts to armor or can attack more quickly. Others have special attacks that are more deadly, but they’ll usually make up for their overpowered attack by being easier to knock down. The goal is to get all of the heroes in a row, scuttling off into the distance behind your main character, so they’re all going to be there on the board. Only the leader gets to use a special power, though, so if you really need a quick fire attack or more of a powershot, choose wisely.

Pick the leader that's going to get you past your foes.

Pick the leader that’s going to get you past your foes.

Dungeons and Sprites

I like the look of Nimble Quest a lot. These are the same people who brought us Tiny Tower and Pocket Planes, and the people at NimbleBit have continued the tradition of retro graphics updated to look good on contemporary devices. The sprites in Nimble Quest don’t look all that different from those you’d see in a great SNES Japanese RPG, which is absolutely a good thing.

While the dungeons for Nimble Quest are a lot of fun and really change as you move through the game, the boards aren’t that big or exciting. I certainly understand moving a long line of sprites around a tight space while not bumping into any baddies or slamming into the wall like you had too much ale the night before is sort of the point of the whole game, but it doesn’t make for a very interesting place to be. I would have liked to have seen more oddly shaped spaces or interesting obstacles that coincide with each dungon’s theme.

I'm about to set out on a new adventure.

I’m about to set out on a new adventure.

Moving was sort of a funny thing to get used to, especially on a keyboard. Nimble Quest won’t let you just reverse a character, and I repeatedly walked face first into the wall before I got used to how to change direction. So you won’t have to face the tragedy of watching your heroes die brutal face splat deaths over and over again, I’ll let you in on the trick. If you’re walking to the right, before you can make an about face and start walking to the left, you’ll have to move up or down first. If you’re headed north, take a turn to the left or right before heading south. These words of wisdom will save you a lot of heartache.

Back to the Beginning

NimbleBit is known for putting out freemium games, and Nimble Quest is no different. People fall into different camps when it comes to freemium. I’m not shy about saying I like freemium, because it gives me a chance to try before I buy, and if an app is worth it, I’ll toss a few bones into the hat to show my appreciation. Others see it as a money grab or hate the slowdowns they so frequently hit that all but force them to pay up to keep the game going, and I can’t say I blame them. Sure enough, there are plenty of buffs and unlocks to buy in Nimble Quest.

If I want to keep going, I'll have to pay.

If I want to keep going, I’ll have to pay.

None of those are necessary to play the game, though, and if you’re a fan of rogue-likes, you probably won’t ever have to spend a dime on Nimble Quest. Rogue-likes don’t give you lives or do-overs; once you’re dead, you go all the way back to the beginning and lose all the progress you’ve gained. There are people who love these sorts of games, and if you don’t pay up, Nimble Quest more or less plays like that. If you want to preserve your progress when you die, though, you’re sooner or later going to have to start feeding coins into the machine.

Final Thoughts

Nimble Quest is a fun take on the old Snake arcade game with a neat JRPG twist. While you’re not actually casting spells or reaching for your Fenix Down, the adorable sprites and nostalgic dungeons really make you feel like you’re playing from an SNES cartridge.

The actual gameplay is challenging, made even more so by the permadeath imposed if you don’t pay to pick up where you left off. Depending on how you like to play, the game will be a lot less rage-inducing with a few in app purchases, but if you don’t mind starting over (and over and over), Nimble Quest will be a lot of retro fun.

    

Using Remote Files More Easily with ExpanDrive

A computer network exists to ease the transfer of data from one computer to another. Before networks became common in homes and offices, moving even a small file would require transferring the file to some temporary medium, often a floppy disk, taking that temporary storage to the other location, and then copying the file onto the new destination computer. It took more time and effort and moving a file to a computer in another building or location required someone to walk or drive the disk there. Now with the ubiquity of networks this task has become an almost transparent action. We routinely move files around our local networks with little more difficultt than moving files within on our computer.

This easy transfer still only holds in when the source and destination are two computers on a local network. Once you need to transfer a file over the Internet, that is to a computer somewhere else, things get more complicated. This is such a common need and over time several dedicated protocols such as FTP and SFTP arose for this task. Unlike the seemingly transparent transfers on the local network, transfers with these protocols require a specialized client such as Cyberduck or FileZilla to move files between the remote location and your local computer.

The ExpanDrive app seeks to bring the convenience of a local drive to remote storage normally accessed through FTP, SFTP, and on Amazon’s S3 service. It makes a FTP, SFTP, or Amazon S3 connection appear like a USB drive plugged into your computer and transfers to these remote systems as simple as moving a file to an external hard drive. Let’s look at how well it works.

ExpanDrive

ExpanDrive can be downloaded from the ExpanDrive web site. ExpanDrive is not a new app and was reviewed several years ago on Mac.Appstorm. A recent update to version 3.0 changed the ExpanDrive interface quite a bit and added a number of new features. The new interface appears heavily inspired by the Windows 8 style, but still feels like a Mac OS app. I also think the new design marks an improvement over the previous interface. It brings the interface on the Windows and Mac applications to a similar design while still feeling like the native OS. This is an advantage to those who use both environment like myself.

The program allows a thirty day free trial and costs $39.95 if you decide to continue using after the trial. The program is built especially for web designers and server administrators who have files on a remote system that you wish to edit and modify directly. The traditional workflow in this case was to use a dedicated application to bring those files down to your computer, use another app to make the needed updates, and then go back to the transfer app to move the changed files back up. Another case was to create files in an app and then use a dedicated transfer app to move the files to the server. This process is slow and error prone. Every web designer has at least once forgotten to upload a changed file back to the server resulting in an error or appearance problem for a web site.

Remote Files in Finder

Creating New Drive Connection

Create a new connections requires only entering the basic information about the connection.

Setting up a connection to a remote server is easy. On the New Drive tab, you first pick the server type (FTP, FTPS, or Amazon S3). For FTP and FTPS you then enter the name or IP address of the server along with your username and password. For Amazon S3 connections you will need to supply your Access Key Id an Secret Access Key to connect. Optional settings allow you to pick a custom port for SFTP and FTP along with entering a nickname and default remote path on the server for the connection.

Menu Bar

You can connect and disconnect drives at any time from the Menu Bar Icon.

Once created connections are persistent. As long as ExpanDrive runs, your connection will persist until you disconnect it. If your Mac goes to sleep, it will connect upon waking. If your network connection goes away, then ExpanDrive will reestablish the connection once it returns. It’s pretty close to being set and forget for remote access. When done working with the connection you can disconnect it either using the drop down menu from the menu bar icon or the eject icon next to the link. The menu bar allows quick access to start connections, disconnect active connections, or bring up the interface.

Viewing a Remote FTP Server through ExpanDrive

Viewing a Remote FTP Server through ExpanDrive

Transfers feel about as responsive as using a native client. I used the program to transfer a couple of medium sized web sites to a new server and transfers felt as fast as using FileZilla or a similar client. I also found the convenience of having the connections show as tabs in Explorer (thanks to TotalFinder) made moving files to the server quick and easy.

For Amazon S3 connection ExpanDrive works very well. The speed feels fast and responsive in my testing. Setting it up was quick and I soon had access to my buckets on S3. Being able to connect directly and work with them through the same interface as any other folder was very useful. For web sites being hosted off Amazon S3 the speed up uploading and updating alone is worth the program price.

Conclusion

Overall I like ExpanDrive. The program provides convenience when working with files on remote servers. Finder becomes your interface to remote servers making editing and copying files fast and easy. Apps with no knowledge of FTP can now directly open and access files on any server.

The cost feels a bit high for what it does, but if you spend a lot of time working on servers then that ease of use and time saved will rapidly pay for itself. Overall ExpanDrive feels like a solid product and worth a look if you find yourself talking with FTP, FTPS, or Amazon S3 servers on a regular basis from your Mac.

The developers have let us know that they’re nearing release of the next version of ExpanDrive, which adds a lot of new features, including Google Drive integration. We’re looking forward to look at it.

    

Ulysses III – A Markdown Writing App Like no Other

You’ve likely used word processors like Word, TextEdit, and Pages, as well as plain-text writing apps like iA Writer and Byword. If you’re a serious writer, you’ve likely used or at least looked at advanced writing apps like Scrivener or the original Ulysses.

But you’ve never seen anything like Ulysses III. It’s a totally new take on an advanced writing app, bringing the best of Markdown-focused plain text editors together with a multi-document management system that makes sense. Throw in HUDs that make Markdown formatting easier to use than rich editing in Word, and you’ve got one serious writing app. One that must be seen to be believed.


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A Fresh Take on a Writing App

First off, Ulysses III is a brand new app, albeit one with a 10 year legacy. The Soulmen team even listed the version number as Ulysses III 1.0. No stone has been left unturned; everything in the app is new, yet familiar if you’ve been using plain-text writing apps. If you never liked older versions of Ulysses — perhaps thought they were too complex or confusing — you’ll likely be pleasantly surprised with Ulysses III. If you loved older versions of Ulysses, you’ll likely love the new version, but you might have to learn to love it for itself. You’ve really never used an app like this.

Ulysses III is a writing app built around a library of documents, fused with a super-charged plain text/Markdown editor. You won’t want to use it as the default app to open text files; in fact, if you open individual files in Ulysses, it saves them as a new version in its library, and the changes won’t be saved back to the original file. That in itself is a leap for most people used to writing in plain text apps, but it’s a leap that can make a lot of sense if used right.

Ben Brooks describes Ulysses III as a notebook, where traditional text editors and plain-text writing apps are a piece of paper. That might be one of the most apt descriptions yet.

The Best Onboarding Process Ever

With that, Ulysses III needs a bit of an introduction to get you started in it. It surely delivers. On first launch, you’ll be asked if you want to enable iCloud sync (which you can always go back and change if you want), and then asked if you prefer Markdown or Textile style formatting (you’ll want to select the asterisks options for traditional Markdown). But hey: when’s the last time you’ve seen a writing app actually give you the option?

Getting Started settings that make sense

After that, you’ll be introduced to the app with a group of documents about how to use Ulysses III, inside the app itself with all the features you’ll learn to love in the app. There’s the main content in the right 3rd of the app, a list of the documents in the current group in the middle, and a left sidebar much like the one in Finder that contains your groups of documents and more. It’s simple and familiar at first glance.

You’ll have iCloud documents — default if you enabled it — but you can also add “External Sources” from the buttons on the bottom. This lets you, say, add a folder of plain text note files you have saved in Dropbox right into Ulysses, where it’ll feel as integrated as any other document in Ulysses. You can even create new files in that folder, change their file names from the top of the sheet, edit the files as sheets with the changes saved immediately to the original file, and more. So, while it won’t work well with your individual files, it will work well if you already have an organized system of working with plain text files, as you can bring the whole folder into Ulysses with you.

Ulysses III looks like many notes apps at first glance

Dig in, though, and you’ll find dozens of delightful differences, hidden just below the surface right until you need them. There’s line numbers on the right side, a near-absence of buttons, and a delightful iA Writer-style editing theme that morphs to a dark mode, single column of text when you go full screen (with equally beautiful integration of the Solarized light and dark color schemes). There’s even a “Pure Mode” for those who love flat UIs. Typing feels as smooth as you’d want, with a blue iOS-style cursor or a traditional OS X one. There’s nifty additions to the extras you’d expect: scroll to the end of a document, then pull up a little further on your touchpad, and you’ll see the next document. It feels natural, yet new.

Who knew word count could look so nice?

Markdown, Simplified

Ulysses III is organized with groups, subgroups, and sheets. Sheets are individual documents, while groups are essentially folders. There’s also Filters, which are smart folders that’ll surface everything that meets your filter criteria — pretty handy if you use Ulysses to store everything you write and clip.

Everything you write will live on a sheet, which can be as long or short as you want. You can easily move sheets around, select multiple sheets to view them together in a continuous sheet (and it really acts like one sheet while selected, even showing the total word count of the set of sheets together, and letting you search through the whole set). Or, you can glue a set of sheets together to save them as one sheet when you’re done writing. That makes it easy to break up your writing into, say, a sheet per section, then pull it all together when you’re ready to share your work.

Gluing your sheets together

Writing in your sheets with Markdown formatting is simple, even if you’re not well versed in Markdown. You can simply press CMD+B or I to set text as bold or italicized, respectively, and you’ll see the Markdown formatting along with actual formatting on the text itself. Press CMD+L to add a link to selected text, or type brackets around text, and you’ll be greeted with a small popover to enter your link and its title.

You can add footnotes in much the same way by typing (fn), or can drag in images and videos to have them added to your text with Markdown formatting — albeit hidden Markdown formatting. You can add in-line comments that won’t be exported, to help you keep track of what’s going on in your document, and can add notes to a document itself, again saved only in your Ulysses copy. It’s a brilliantly simple way to edit text with faux-rich text formatting powered by Markdown.

I thought Markdown meant no UI. Guess I thought wrong.

There is one odd thing: Ulysses treats links and footnotes the same way, pushing them to the end of your document. It’d be nice to see it treat links the same way most Markdown writing is done, with the link right after the linked text, but perhaps this is necessary for Ulysses’ UI. But that’s a small complaint, and any app that takes Markdown files will have no problem reading files created in Ulysses.

There’s more awesome text editing features, of course: full OS X integration, so Dictionary, spell check, and even versions works perfectly in Ulysses. You can search for — and preview — your groups and sheets from Spotlight. It’s a great experience, from writing your initial ideas and drafts to pulling it all together into a polished work.

Publishing from Ulysses

Ulysses may be a great app for simple writing, but it’s aimed at long form writing and publishing. That’s apparent in the tools to glue sheets together, the reading time in the info pane, the Markdown headings powered quick navigation pane (which is awesome for finding your way around in longer pieces of text), and in the Favorites section that lets you add related sheets to the top of your sheet for quick reference.

But it’s most apparent from the Quick Export tool, which lets you turn a sheet, group, or set of sheets you’ve selected into a polished PDF, export it as HTML or plain text, or send it to Word in RTF form. There’s more coming, too: Brett Terpstra already announced that Ulysses will be tightly integrated with the next version of Marked which should bring more export formatting options, and the Ulysses team has already listed ePub support as forthcoming, along with the potential for Tumblr publishing and more in the future.

Now that’s a simplified way to export documents

Daedelus Touch: Ulysses on the go

There’s one more little extra with Ulysses III: it integrates perfectly with The Soulmen’s mobile app, Daedalus Touch. This app shows again The Soulmen’s willingness to redefine how apps should work, this time with an innovative stacks-based document navigation that makes sorting through your text simple on your iPad or iPhone. Check iPad.AppStorm’s review for more info, but it’s an app that has to be seen to be appreciated.

Now, it integrates with Ulysses III as well, giving you a simple way to write across your Mac and iOS devices. There’s only one cavort: your Daedalus notes will show up only as one section in your Ulysses library, and only the notes in that section will sync with iOS. You’ll need to move any notes you want synced with your iOS devices to the Daedalus section to make sure they’re everywhere. In fact, if you only have one Mac, you might want to use the Daedalus section as your default writing area instead of iCloud. Both are powered by iCloud, but only the former will sync with your iOS devices.

Conclusion

Ulysses III is an incredibly impressive writing app, one any serious writer should strongly consider getting. It’s that good. It can compete with Markdown plain-text editors and top-of-the-line longform writing apps. It’s excellent for longer projects — the PDF export almost tugs at you to turn your random writings into something more lasting — but equally excellent for individual short writings. It could be your next notes app, but it could also be so much more.

Again, you need to appreciate it for what it is. It’s not your traditional text editor, and you’ll need to work around how it works to get the best out of it. But as you bring in your text folders, and start putting it to use for new projects, you’ll likely find it indispensable. I’m already starting to, just two days in.

    

Are Productivity Apps Necessary?

Recently I’ve gotten interested in time management techniques and apps, and I’ve gotten to review a few Pomodoro Technique apps and even had an interview with the developer of one of them. If you’re easily distracted and have a tendency to procrastinate, there’s nothing better than a little pull on the ears to keep you on track and away from distractions, and those tools are great for that.

But what about when those tools become more distracting and harder to use than they are helpful? Having all those great features and animations can actually slow you down, as I have found. So the question is, are these tools actually necessary, and to what extent? Let’s explore a few of the ins and outs of the problem.

The Apps

Alfred

Alfred

I recently started using a productivity app called Alfred, which is pretty much a launcher app with some deep customization through personalized workflows. It took me a good couple hours to get the hang of it and set it up to fit my needs. Once I got it working, I thought to myself, “is it really going to save me that much time, that I justified spending a good amount of time just to get it working?”. That’s the thing with productivity apps. Alfred might be worth it, but there are a bunch of them out there that might not suit you.

Just a few weeks ago Kyle Kinkade, developer of Pomodorable (now known as Eggscellent), made a point on how a piece of paper and a pencil are about as useful as any productivity app. That’s certainly true, but there’s also some convenience to working with everything in one place (your computer), and the ease that it provides. So, how can we tell if an app is really necessary?

Know Your Tools

Eggscellent

Eggscellent

Knowing when and how to use productivity apps is the most important thing. I’m writing this while my Eggscellent timer ticks away in my menu bar, but this is the first time I’ve used it in a few days. I already know the app well and I know what to expect from it. I can fire it up and get working with it in just a few seconds, and I know that it can help me be more focused on what I do.

If it takes you more time to setup your timer or your task lists than it does to actually get working, then you ought to do some changes. Sometimes, a minimalist approach, where features get sacrificed to make room for a cleaner, easier interface, is completely necessary. Otherwise, you’d be better off with a paper and a pencil.

Work Wisely

Pomodoro Technique

Pomodoro Technique

I’ve used Pomodoro Technique-related apps for a while now, and I’ve come to resent the technique a little bit: if I used it for every single task I come across, my day would be pretty boring, although I’d probably get a lot of things done. I’m now able to tell which tasks might require me adhering to a productivity technique to get them done.

There’s work that I enjoy, and then there’s other work where I need to keep focused because it’s easy to lose interest in it. There are also days when I have dozens of tasks to accomplish, and in those moments it would probably be easier to procrastinate or put the work off, but now I know those are the situations when I need a productivity app to get me through the day, like I’m doing right now.

Identify the circumstances where using a productivity technique or app is appropriate, and where it’ll actually be helpful instead of distracting, is crucial.

Less is Better

Paper and pencil

Sometimes, that’s all you need

A productivity app won’t automatically make your work prolific; in fact, it many cases it might slow you down if you don’t use it wisely. After all, having the coolest to-do app out there or the best time-managing app isn’t going to do a lot for you if you aren’t using them appropriately. Fantastic animations and great features that create a sense of reward might get you interested at first, but it’s very easy for them to become more of a burden once you start getting some traction with your tools.

Choose your tools wisely and work with them astutely. And share some of your opinions on the topic below. Do you use any productivity apps routinely? How do you know when they’re becoming more of a burden than they are helpful? How do you choose which ones to start using? Let us know!

    

Turn Your Wii Remote Into a Mac Gamepad With WJoy

I love to see new games move to the Mac, but I’m primarily a console gamer. The difference for me is the console controller, and while I could invest in a Mac gaming controller, there’s some cost involved there, and, well, I already have my consoles for games like that.

That doesn’t mean I don’t sometimes want a game controller for my Mac, but I can’t exactly plug my DualShock 3 into my USB port. My hopes haven’t been far off, though, because WJoy is a tiny app that will connect your Wii Remote and Mac, allowing you to use it as a controller for Mac games. We’ll see if it works as advertised.

Let’s Connect

When you open WJoy, you’ll see a Wii Remote icon appear in your menu bar. You’ll want to have your Wii Remote ready to go, or WJoy’s not going to be much good. Click on the WJoy menu bar icon, and select Begin Discovery–which is misspelled in the menu, but we take what we can get. A notification should appear to let you know WJoy is looking for your Wii Remote.

WJoy will start looking for your Wii Remote.

WJoy will start looking for your Wii Remote.

Grab your Wii Remote, and locate the 1 and 2 buttons. Your Wii Remote doesn’t have to be on yet, and it will only really stay on if it can connect to a device anyway, so ignore the power button for now. Press the 1 and 2 buttons at the same time and release them. All four player lights will start blinking.

After a connection has been made, the player 1 light will glow solid blue. You’ll get a notification from WJoy that a new Wii Remote has been connected, and you’ll even get a reassuring little smiley face to let you know all is well.

The Wii Remote is connected.

The Wii Remote is connected.

When you’re ready to disconnect your Wii Remote from your Mac, press and hold the Wii Remote power button until the blue player 1 light goes out. WJoy will also let you know via a notification that a Wii Remote has been disconnected. You’ll get a sad face out it, too, just to let you know you’ve hurt its feelings.

A Bit of Troubleshooting

If WJoy doesn’t won’t connect to your Wii Remote out of the box, check that your Bluetooth settings in System Preferences are good to go. Your Wii Remote is essentially just another Bluetooth device, and that’s how WJoy connects your Wii Remote to your Mac. That means that Bluetooth needs to be turned on in System Preferences and your Mac needs to be discoverable. When your Wii Remote is properly connected, you’ll see it listed among your Bluetooth devices.

If you don't turn on Bluetooth, you'll the the Begin Discovery notification, but nothing will happen.

If you don’t turn on Bluetooth, you’ll the the Begin Discovery notification, but nothing will happen.

Once your Mac has found your Wii Remote with WJoy, click the WJoy menu bar icon to get just a little bit of information. WJoy will tell you your Wii Remote’s Bluetooth Device Address, which could be useful and is handy to have right in the menu bar, at least. More importantly, though, you’ll get to take a look at how much power your Wii Remote has left. This is a pretty great feature, as I tend to push my controller batteries until they’re completely dry. WJoy lets me know exactly when I’m absolutely going to have to give in and change them.

You can get a bit of info about your remote, including battery life.

You can get a bit of info about your remote, including battery life.

Mapping Your Controller

WJoy should get your Wii Remote to work with just about any game that supports a joystick or gamepad. The newest version even brings limited support for nunchucks and other accessories, like the Nintendo classic controller. Compatibility is spotty, though, so you’ll want to be aware of that when connecting and setting up your Wii Remote.

As with any game that supports a controller, you’ll need to set up, or map, your controls inside the game. This is standard for most games, and even console games with native controllers will display the button mapping and often allow you to remap some or all controls. You’ll want to do this with your Wii Remote, as well, even if everything seems to work on its own.

If you have a harder time getting your game to accept the Wii Remote’s input, first check that you’re still paired via WJoy. If everything is all good, you can try a companion app, Enjoy, that will map all of your Wii Remote’s buttons outside of the game for you. With Enjoy you can create separate button map profiles for each game, so you won’t have to constantly remap your Wii Remote every time you switch between games.

Final Thoughts

WJoy is probably not going to replace a controller for a serious gamer. It’s not nearly as compatible as a controller made to work with the Mac, and the Wii Remote just doesn’t have enough buttons to make it a serious contender as a non-Nintendo controller.

That said, it’s great for Nintendo games and other classic ROMs. There are a bunch of indie games that will work really well with the Wii Remote as the primary controller, too. If you’re not looking to invest in a gaming controller or just want a more authentic Nintendo feel for your ROMs, WJoy paired with a Wii Remote is a great option.

    

This Week in Mac App News and Deals

And we’re back to Thursday’s News and Deals roundup!

The selection of news, deals and reads for this week looks superb, seriously. We’ve got Ulysses III coming to the Mac App Store and Reeder going free, Rdio’s new video streaming and Amazon’s cloud sync service.

Don’t miss our interesting reads for this week, because they are great! Alfred extensions, iCloud, App Store pricing, DuckDuckGo and more should give you enough reading material for the weekend.

News from the World of Apps

New version of Ulysses hits the Mac App Store

The third version of the word processor has finally come after a long, long beta. It promises to keep the minimalism so common these days in writing apps, combined with all the strengths that you can expect from Ulysses. It’s essentially a full new app, one that’s a more robust place to write and organize your texts. And it’s has ePub export coming soon.

Ulysses is a minimal environment with robust tools for writers.

Ulysses is a minimal environment with robust tools for writers.

FunnyorDie releases the first teaser for the iSteve Movie

Hollywood is coming out with 2 bio-pics of Steve Jobs, one with Ashton Kutcher, which premiered in Sundance, and the other written by Aaron Sorkin (who also wrote The Social Network). However, FunnyorDie leads the way with its bio-parody, casting Justin Long as Jobs. You may recall him from Die Hard 4, yet the real reference is better, much, much better.

Google says missing iTunes Store links in search results due to technical issues

Earlier this week it was reported that Google searches were not displaying iTunes Store links among its first results. Of course, everybody thought it was a retaliation from the search giant, because, you know, intrigue brings more page views. However, a spokesperson from Google declared that they were having issues fetching pages from the iTunes web servers. Well, that keeps the room for conspiracy.

Reeder for Mac and iPad will be free until version 2.0 ships

After the wave of Google Reader’s buzz last week (got it?), Reeder’s developer decided to take their Mac and iPad apps free until the next version comes. I believe that the fate of Reader itself makes users suspicious of the price tag, however, I feel this is a maneuver from Reeder to keep the spotlight as Feedly reaches more than 3 million users. Reeder has promised to get support for Fever, Feedbin, and more, so hopefully it’ll live on as a 1st class RSS reader for the Mac.

The sentence is clear: the development of Reeder will continue. What's your opinion?

The sentence is clear: the development of Reeder will continue. What’s your opinion?

Amazon brings Cloud Drive file sync for OS X

Yes, we got what we all needed: another Dropbox. Amazon’s Cloud Drive gives 5 GB for free and offers some great plans starting with $10/year for 20 GB, up to $500/year for 1000 GB. Just install the app, appoint a folder and drag files inside. It carries the Amazon brand, so you can’t deny the promising quality of this service — though the app itself is powered by Java.

Rdio launches Vdio, an on-demand streaming video site

You probably know Rdio, the streaming music service, and maybe you even subscribe to it. This week they released Vdio, which goes against the current stream by being a pay-per-view service. This way it doesn’t compete with Netflix or Amazon. It is only available in the US and UK for now, and subscribers with Rdio Unlimited plans already get $25 for free to check it out.

Webkit’s just for Safari again

With Chrome using Webkit, and Opera having recently switched to the Chrome version of Webkit, it seemed that Webkit would be the One True Browser Engine. And it basically is, today. Tomorrow, though, it likely won’t be. That’s because Google just announced that the Chrome team’s ditching Webkit to make their own new rendering engine: Blink. And yes, Opera will be following Google, and using Blink in the near future.

That’s not all. The Firefox team announced that they’re partnering with Samsung to build Servo, a new browser engine built in the programming language Rust. That’s rather curious, considering that Samsung is most famous for building devices powered by Android, Google’s mobile OS. We don’t have our hopes too high on this project, though, seeing as even the 20th version of Firefox doesn’t integrate very nicely with OS X Mountain Lion.

Apple, we’re looking forward to what you do with Safari this year. Webkit’s all your game again.

The Best App Deals for Your Mac

Reeder $4.99 > FREE

Nimble Quest (New) FREE

CloudClip $3.99 > $1.99

Should I Sleep $1.99 > FREE

Should I Sleep uses several sensors to prevent your Mac from sleeping.

Should I Sleep uses several sensors to prevent your Mac from sleeping.

OCRKit $59.99 > $47.99

Designer $14.99 > $9.99

Pilot’s Path $3.99 > $.99

Fotor – Photo Editor $14.99 > FREE

Dragon Dictate for Mac 3 $200 > $100

Dragon Dictate is the business tool for folks who hate typing.

Dragon Dictate is the business tool for folks who hate typing.

CopyLess $6.99 > $2.99

Paragon Mini-Bundle! 10.0.1 $99.80 > $29.95

Ulysses III (New) $19.99 (50% off for launch)

Timebar (New) $2.99

Flow $99/year > $69/year

The Humble Mobile Bundle Pay what you want for 4 games and get 4 more by paying more than the average.

Interesting Reads for the Week

Web Excursions for April 01, 2013: Alfred 2 Edition

Understanding App Store Pricing – Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Why Developers Shouldn’t Use iCloud Syncing, Even If It Worked

Apple fans: Microsoft is no longer the enemy

(Podcast)Markdown Revisited

Meet Gabriel Weinberg, the man taking on Google and Bing

The untold story behind Apple’s $13,000 operating system

Did We Miss Anything?

That’s all of the news, deals, and interesting links for this week, but if there’s anything you think we missed, be sure to let us know in the comments below. Otherwise, check back next Thursday for more Mac news, deals, and more!

Tidy Up Your Clipboard Contents With TextScrub

We’ve all had to carry over text between different places, and it’s really annoying having your text pasted with all sorts of different weird formatting styles and other things that don’t carry over so well like bullet points, which then double your work as you have to correct and re-format what you’ve pasted to make it coincide with the rest of your text.

The app we are reviewing today is called TextScrub, and as its name implies, it can help you tidy up the text that’s in your clipboard so that it’s more easily transferred over. Sound interesting?

TextScrub

TextScrub

TextScrub

TextScrub is a very simple app that lives in your menu bar, and that when invoked, will clean the text in your clipboard from unwanted styling, weird formatting and even tweak a few words if you tell it to. It goes for $2.99 on the Mac App Store, but is it worth it?

How It Works

How It Works

How It Works

What’s so great about TextScrub is that it stands by its own and it doesn’t interfere with your Mac’s built in clipboard system and shortcuts. If you want to copy and paste a piece of text while keeping the original formatting and styling, you can just do it as you normally would. If instead you want to take advantage of TextScrub’s clipboard cleaning capabilities, you have to invoke it by pressing its button on the menu bar, or by triggering your customizable shortcut for it.

Let’s exemplify this: if you copy a piece of text, it will remain as it is in your clipboard until you activate TextScrub. Once you do so, the new clean version of your text will be overwritten to your clipboard. So there’s actually three steps to using it: copying your text, cleaning it, and then pasting it to your destination. This way, TextScrub makes sure that it completely replace your regular clipboard, but it only builds on it and improves it.

What Can It Do?

Features

Features

When you first heard of TextScrub you probably immediately thought of removing styling from text (color, size, font, etc.), but there’s actually a lot more it can do. Think of it as a smarter clipboard, one that not only can remove those styling bits from text, but that can also remove empty lines or learn to correct certain snippets.

Under the preferences you can find all these settings to customize your TextScrub so that it fits your needs. Here’s a rundown of them:

  • Normalize whitespaces: If your text has any tabulations, double spaces or weird jumps between text, this feature can help you remove them easily.
  • Removing empty lines: If there’s a bunch of line breaks in your clipboard text, this feature will remove them, making it more compact and easier to read (in some cases, anyway).
  • Removing bullet points: If you’re copying a list (such as this one), and you want the bullet points gone, activating this option will have them removed, leaving each item in the list as an ordinary line of text.
  • Text Substitutions: This is where you can give certain keywords or text snippets that you’d like to have replaced with something else. The developer exemplifies this by setting a rule for correcting proper names like “iphone” to “iPhone”, but you can get creative with these and have them do all sorts of things, saving you a lot of time.

Each of these settings can easily be activated and deactivated from the settings window, so you can quickly tweak them depending on what you are trying to copy and paste.

TextScrub vs. OS X Built-In Clipboard System

Comparing

Comparing

If you paste something using the ordinary system command (CMD+V or using the secondary click submenu), your copied text will be transferred over as it is, with links and weird font settings. However, you might be aware of a similar system command that is supposed to remove this and paste your text while “matching the style” of your destination. It’s found under the Edit submenu, but you can also summon it with a shortcut depending on the app you’re using (CMD+Shift+V or CMD+Shift+Alt+V).

Then, why would anyone pay for TextScrub? Well, I compared its functionality to that of the “Paste and Match Style” feature, and there’s one deal breaker: while working with word processors, the built-in feature will remove all formatting but not the hyperlinks, which is something that TextScrub does well. That, and of course, the other extra features of TextScrub that the built-in thing doesn’t even come close to: text substitutions, normalizing white spaces, removing tabulations and bullet points.

Conclusion

TextScrub is a pretty good example of how an app is supposed to be done. Despite it stepping on the toes of a system built-in feature, and the simplistic nature of the app, every single detail of it is well thought through and executed. Understanding and swapping settings is quick and easy, using the app feels cool because of the animations and sounds, and even the website of the app is inviting and superbly designed.

Now, justifying spending the $3 bucks for it is up to you. You might think that most of its functionality is covered by the built-in clipboard system, but if you’ve ever felt it underpowered and wished you could tweak it to work a little more for pasting plain text given certain conditions, then give TextScrub a try. Just the sole functionality of being able to paste text to Pages with all the hyperlinks removed has made me a fan. But what do you think?

The Apps We Use: Paula DuPont

I work from home on my own computer, so of course I have a bunch of apps to get me through the day. You know, I listen to music, send and respond to email, and am constantly using one browser or another. To tell you I stream music using Spotify or use Safari to browse isn’t really letting you in on any secrets of how I get through my day or giving out any tips on what apps I can’t live without.

Instead of looking to the more conspicuous apps that I use everyday and always have open, I want to let you in on some of the apps that don’t seem so integral at first blush, but that I just can’t make it through the day without.

For Writing

Google Drive

Beyond the obvious surfing and searching, I do all of my writing in Google Chrome using Google Drive. I’ve always got access to all of my files no matter what device I’m using, and using Google Drive, they’re editable. There are other great cloud services, arguably better ones, but not every service allows you to edit your documents and even create new ones.

I suppose I’d run into trouble if I ever didn’t have an internet connection, but I have other word processing apps on my computer that would allow me to write if I needed to. The last time I didn’t have the internet for any period of time, I also didn’t have power and had just survived a major hurricane, so I wasn’t doing a lot of writing anyway. Other than nationally declared disasters, though, I’m pretty much always connected, so using Google Drive gives me access to all of the articles I’m writing, wherever I happen to find myself.

Price: Free
Requires: OS X 10.6 or later
Developer: Google

For Notes

Evernote

I’ve seen some Evernote tutorials, and there are note-taking geniuses who absolutely get the most out of Evernote. They have great systems for managing just about everything in their lives and keeping themselves 100% organized. I’ll tell you I’m not that girl, and while I’m not getting everything out of Evernote that I could, it’s still become an indispensable part of how I work.

I have to keep track of the articles I’m working on, what’s assigned to me, and all of the ideas I have but I haven’t pitched. If I get a great idea but don’t write it down somewhere, it’s gone; worse yet is when I write down a great idea but forget where I stuck it. That’s why Evernote is so important to me. I have templates to take care of all of my articles, to manage my ideas, and everything is organized into notebooks for all the different projects and sites I’m writing for.

Beyond just work, I also let Evernote handle all the bits of paper and emails that would otherwise get lost but that I’ll probably need down the line. Warranty and receipt scans go into Evernote and confirmation emails get forwarded to my personal Evernote inbox. Evernote handles all of my bill statements and hangs onto copies of tax documents, too. Though I still need hard copies of some of those documents, I live in a flood-prone area, and it’s good to have backups close at hand in Evernote.

Price: Free
Requires: OS X 10.6.6 or later
Developer: Evernote Corporation

For Keeping in Touch

Messages

There are a few people I like to keep in touch with all day, including my mom who texts constantly but doesn’t have access to a chat application at work. I want to keep up with my mom’s office goings on, but I don’t like having to move from my computer to my phone whenever a new text message comes in. It slows me down and drags me out of whatever I was doing more so than just switching to a different window.

That’s why I was so happy to adopt Messages as my primary chat client when it came out of beta with Mountain Lion. Not only can I let my mom in on what’s going on with my cats and she tell me all about the passive aggressive note she found on her yogurt, but I can still chat with my friends who are using other chat protocols. With a few sleights of hand, Messages is doing more than just connecting you to AIM or Google Chat; you’ll even be chatting on Facebook, too. With the new Project Amy for App.net, you can get your private messages in Messages, as well, and use it like an App.net instant messaging service.

Apple was offering a Messages beta for Lion users, but that was discontinued in December 2012. If you want to use Messages, you’re going to need Mountain Lion; Messages isn’t available via separate download, unfortunately.

Price: Free; included with Mountain Lion, $19.99
Requires: OS X 10.8
Developer: Apple

MenuTab Pro for Facebook

When I said I was going to tell you what apps I use, I didn’t say it was going to be pretty. This is the part where I tell you that I may be more than a little addicted to Facebook. I’m hardly a serial friender–I’ve only just made it past the century mark–and I know how to use my privacy and account controls so I only see the updates I want, but that may be the denial talking. Because with MenuTab Pro for Facebook, I’ve always got Facebook open, and I’m always ready for updates.

Now, before you start planning an intervention, it really isn’t as bad as all that. I get banner notifications to let me know what the update is, and MenuTab lets me decide exactly what sort of notifications I want for which events. If you don’t need to know every time you’ve got a new friend request, turn that off entirely, and since I’ve got Messages handling Facebook Chat for me, that’s switched off, too.

So I’m only getting the notifications that I want, and I can see what’s happening in the banner before I decide whether it’s worth it to stop what I’m doing. Best friend tagged me in a cat picture post? Drop everything. My husband posted some boring graphic design tutorial he made? Whatever. MenuTab actually saves me time and makes me more productive, because it keeps me on task and away from the Facebook website when there’s nothing new for me.

Price: $1.99
Requires: OS X 10.6.8 or later
Developer: FIPLAB Ltd

For Everything Else

Bartender

I’ve probably got more apps than are good for me, and I’ve got lots of one-off apps that don’t do a whole lot, but the one thing they do, they do a good job of. I like app specialization, because bloated apps that try to do too much often end up not doing anything very well at all. The problem is that I end up with a lot of apps, and because I have so many, I try to stick them up in my menu bar out of the way. At a certain point (that I reached a long time ago), even the menu bar can’t handle all those icons for all those apps.

Enter Bartender, which has made it a lot easier for me to get more done. My menu bar had literally gotten so crowded, I’d run completely out of space up there. Bartender fixed all that by moving everything I didn’t need to be looking at all the time to a secondary menu bar, controlled by Bartender’s single menu icon. Bartender will leave your icons as they are, shift them to the Bartender bar, or hide them entirely if you want. If you get a notification to a hidden menu bar icon and want to make it visible or just want to bring everything back all at once, Bartender can take care of that, too.

Price: $15.00
Requires: OS X 10.6 or later with a 64-bit processor
Developer: Surtees Studios

Hyperdock

When I was working in website QA, I had to work in Windows almost as much as Mac OS, and I became spoiled by some of the great features I was missing out on in (at the time) Snow Leopard. Hover over an active program icon on the Windows taskbar, and you’ll get a preview of all of your open windows displayed as thumbnails. That’s not all, though; drag a window to the left or right, and it will snap into place without being manually resized. Pretty awesome and a huge time saver if you need to keep several windows up and active on your display. We’re still missing those sorts of features in Mountain Lion, but Hyperdock finally gives Mac users a taste of what the folks on Windows have had for so long.

With Hyperdock running, hover over an active application icon on your Dock to get a preview of your open windows, and select or close them right in the preview. If you’ve got iTunes open, you can control your music in the Dock using Hyperdock, too. Drag active windows to either side or to the corners to resize them to fill half the screen or just a quarter; pull a window straight up, and it maximizes. Hyperdock seems to crash on me a lot, and that’s not a happy circumstance, but I otherwise love it so much, I’ve placed it on my watchlist in Continu, an app that automatically relaunches crashed apps.

Price: $9.99
Requires: OS X 10.6.6 or later
Developer: Christian Baumgart

Final Thoughts

Those are just some of the apps I need to get by everyday. What do you think of my choices? What apps do you use that are completely indispensable? Let us know in the comments!

Quicksand: Automatic Syncing of Your Recent Files

If you need to work with different computers and devices throughout your day, then you are most likely familiar with all the cloud services that are around, like Dropbox, that allow you to keep your documents everywhere, always ready to be downloaded and uploaded again.

But then we’ve all been in those situations where we just forget to switch a file we are working on to our cloud folder so that it gets synced. Wouldn’t it be cool to have an app that automatically uploaded everything recent for you, regardless of its location on your computer? That’s what Quicksand’s all about. Let’s check it out!

Quicksand

Setup

Setup

Quicksand is a seemingly simple app that could potentially save you a lot of time and inconvenient situations. All it does once setup, is create a folder in your computer where it’ll start automatically making a copy of your most recent files. You can then sync this folder with your favorite cloud service, so that you can have all your most recent files available anywhere.

How It Works

Quicksand Menu

Quicksand Menu

The first thing you have to do when setting up Quicksand is specify a place in your computer where your most recent files will be copied. Ideally, you should put this new smart folder where all your cloud documents are synced. For example, if you are using Dropbox, which uses its own folder to sync everything inside it, your Quicksand folder should go inside it, where it’ll be synced with all your other cloud files.

From then on, Quicksand will live in your menu bar, continously checking for newly created files and copying them over, modifying them, or deleting them from your Quicksand folder. There will be two steps for your data to be uploaded, though: the Quicksand syncing that checks for new files, and then the periodical syncing that your cloud service uses to sync your files.

What Does It Upload?

Folder

Quicksand’s Folder

Quicksand will copy to its folder anything that it considers a “Recently Opened” file. That means, it works across many apps like Preview, Pages, Byword, and pretty much anything else that can save a file. As soon as you modify any pre-existing documents, they’ll also be included in the most recent files and it’ll be uploaded as well with all of its modifications. Although, if you export something, it won’t be perceived as a “recent document” and therefore won’t be copied over until you open it, so be careful with that.

Deep Tweaking

For being such a simple app, Quicksand lets you tweak a lot of things under its settings. There are a few options for setting a maximum number of files or size for your folder, changing the location of it, tweaking the syncing times, etc. Then there are some options for setting up rules as to what gets updated to the app.

There are two menus under the settings that allow you to set the files that’ll get synced or that won’t. “Synced Folders” lets you set specific paths where the app will exclusively work, although the default one is your whole user’s folder. If you’d like to be more specific instead of having it look everywhere for new files, you can delete the user folder and give the app just a few paths where it should look. Similarly, you can select specific paths that won’t ever get synced.

Tweaking

Tweaking

Then there’s the “Synced Filetypes” option, which lets you specify file extensions that will or won’t get synced. With these, even if you only have a few folders marked for syncing, all the files found with those extensions will get synced, making the app highly customizable and easy to adapt to your workflow.

Support It!

Quicksand (along with Broomstick, which we reviewed a few weeks ago) is developed by Zibity, a New Zealand company led by 15-year-old developer Sebastian Hallum Clarke. Zibity gives away all their apps for free, just encouraging donations but never being too annoying or pity about it. It’s always interesting to hear about these wunderkind developers, but it’s even more interesting when they take this kind of approach to sharing their work.

It might not be an approach for every developer out there (I don’t see Adobe putting out their pricey app suites for free), but there’s something to the idea that seems promising and needs exploring and refining. Getting the app out there for anyone to download guarantees that you’ll reach more people than you would if you charged for it, which can then create a powerful platform for getting your new creations in the eyes of more people quickly.

If you’ve found Zibity’s apps useful and would like to support its makers by helping them continue to do this, then I think some sort of retribution is in order. I am completely impartial to this comany and neither Appstorm nor I have any afiliation with it whatsoever, I’m just saying if we want to keep this kind of business model alive, then it is something worth supporting.

Conclusion

Quicksand is a very simple app, and once you’ve got it setup, you’ll barely remember it’s there until you’re working on your iPad or your office computer and you are in need of a document you were working on last night in your laptop. If you work at all with cloud syncing services such as Dropbox, then Quicksand is a must-have.

But what do you think? Would you use something like this? Let us know in the comments!

Become a Transit Mogul in Rails

I like puzzles, and I like trains, so it happens that I’m often mistaken for a seven-year-old boy or a very active octogenarian. I don’t mind, though, because sometimes I get to combine puzzles and trains, and that’s pretty cool. This isn’t Jigsaw.PuzzleStorm, though, so it’s got to be something a lot better than a 1000 piece locomotive, right?

That’s where Rails comes in, a labor of love from developer BeLight Software. Build your own rail yard and get your trains to their destination in this reboot of the DOS classic. But will the gameplay stand up after all these years? We’ll find out!

All Aboard!

Rails is a port of the old DOS game Shortline Express, and while I never played the original, from what I can tell, Rails is a faithful remake with all of the updated graphics and sound you’d expect. The best part is that with Rails, you don’t have to get to a C:\ prompt to run it.

There’s a tutorial that sets up how the mechanics of the game work, and you’re on firm footing to become the next John Galt, at least for the first few levels, with just what you learn to start. Your main goal is to get trains into stations of a matching color. Yellow is headed for yellow; red makes its way to red. Seems simple enough, but as more trains pour into the rail yard and onto the tracks, you’ll find it a lot harder to pair each train to the corresponding station.

Things start off pretty easy.

Things start off pretty easy.

You build your own tracks, but they can’t just go anywhere. As you begin dragging your cursor along the barren landscape, you’ll see the outlines of potential tracks on the ground. That’s where you can go. You can’t can’t just build anywhere, and if you want your tracks to join up or to change the direction of your trains, you’ll have to start planning ahead. There are stoplights to help you control your trains, making passing a lot easier, but building tracks seems to eat up your stoplights, leaving you with only the switches created at track intersections to prevent massive rail crashes.

Rails starts you out in 1825, and you need to make it to 2013. Reach the present day without crashing too many trains and with enough coin in your pocket, and you’ll reach the next level. There are a fair number of achievements, and some of them seem quite difficult to attain. Rails integrates with Game Center, so you can show off your fancy railroad accomplishments to all your steel magnate friends.

It may seem best to keep your tracks simple, but things may still get complicated.

It may seem best to keep your tracks simple, but things may still get complicated.

The Third Rail

Like any captain of industry worth her salt, I want to innovate, diversify and use business words like “innovate” and “diversify.” To stay on the cutting edge, I need to do more than just use business words, though; I need invest in new trains. There are about a dozen different trains in Rails, with different abilities and features ranging from useful to scary. Bumper trains just sort of bounce off of others without crashing, and inflation trains bring in extra money the longer they’re on the tracks. Nice, right? More difficult to manage trains include the aptly labeled kamikaze trains and the chameleon train, which will suddenly change color.

There's a bunch of different trains that do different stuff.

There’s a bunch of different trains that do different stuff.

Rails is ultimately a puzzle game. Though it walks and talks like a sim, there’s very little leeway to get an Objectivist enterprise going. You’re not really simulating anything here. There’s a bit of money, and you use that to buy stuff, but money was never really a problem for me in Rails. I spent 100% of my focus on keeping my trains from running into each other while trying to get them into the proper stations and creating the tracks to make it happen. Each train is a puzzle of its own, and the challenge comes from trying to solve a bunch at one time.

The game would go a lot more smoothly if I could pull up track I didn’t need anymore. It’s happened that I laid track where I didn’t need it, and an undo would be useful there. Later in the game, once you’ve added on a few more stations, you won’t necessarily need all of the train tracks you created in the beginning. I’d even pay some of my Rails cash to get rid of the old tracks, as I understand is how it worked in the original, but it’s not an option. This seems to be a big bugaboo among the reviewers in the App Store, too.

There are some achievements, which helps to set some goals beyond just moving trains around.

There are some achievements, which helps to set some goals beyond just moving trains around.

Final Thoughts

Sure, Rails isn’t a proper sim; I don’t really get to make any decisions that matter. That doesn’t mean that the puzzles aren’t good. There’s a lot of strategy involved in figuring out how and where to place your track, and you really need to be on top of your game to get two trains of different colors to pass each other safely. Just because you’re not a legitimate tycoon doesn’t mean there isn’t fun to find here in Rails.

If you were a fan of the original Shortline Express, you should absolutely take a look at Rails. Even if you’ve just been looking for a new puzzle experience, this might be a good go to. Just don’t count on it to fulfil all of your capitalist fantasies, because Rails isn’t that game.

Send Quick Voice Messages with Pling

Phone calls and voicemail are things of the past. Now we have Skype, text messaging, Twitter, and Facebook. In all their popularity, though, these services don’t manage to modernize voicemail, they just eliminate it. That makes sense: most people don’t even care about that feature of their phones anyway.

Still, what if we took voice messaging to a new level? WaveDeck did that on the iPhone and now we have Pling, which brings that experience to the Mac as well. Is it all we could ask for?

A Different Kind of Minimalism

One voice conversation is open.

One voice conversation is open.

With most Mac apps, minimalism is defined as a basic user interface with a slim set of features. Not with Pling. This is the kind of app that jumps out at you with a contrasting appearance. The menu bar app doesn’t use any fancy animations to open, but it still manages to surprise you with its dark theme and sparing use of color.

Pling uses an orange and black theme as its main attraction. The dock icon is a gradient that goes from a subtle yellow to a light orange; the menu bar icon is a much more delicate gradient of orange with a grey center. Then there are the chat bubbles, which aren’t anything special. Comprised of stretched ovals, they nearly take up the width of the app.

The problem here is that there is no need to be so redundant in one-on-one chats. When there are just two participants, why display their names beside each message? Furthering that thought, why is there a time signature? Things would look a lot better if it was only shown upon hover.

Overall, the interface doesn’t quite fit in with the rest of OS X. This can be said for my other menu bar apps

It’s Incredibly Quick

Click and hold to record; drag away and let go to cancel.

Click and hold to record; drag away and let go to cancel.

Sending and receiving messages in this app requires very little bandwidth, so you can use it even on slower WiFi connections. When I send messages, the delivery is almost instantaneous. It’s the same when someone is recording one for me. Since Pling shows you when someone is recording (using a little “…” at the bottom of the message history) you will know how long it takes to receive the message. For me it was less than two seconds, even on audio that was nearly a minute long.

Conversing is Easy, But Somewhat Confusing

A conversation can become cluttered.

A conversation can become cluttered.

So, say you want to send a message to your friend. You open the app, click the + button, add him to the conversation, click and hold to record, and then wait for it to transfer. That seems like a bit much just to say a few words. If you look at it another way, saying a lot of words is even harder. You’ll need to hold your mouse button down the whole time, and that doesn’t sound appealing.

I don’t understand why there are no keyboard shortcuts in the app. If not those, how about some favorite contacts? Quick dial is a popular feature on traditional mobile phones and I’m sure people would use it here.

What It Needs

You must go to the website to set your profile picture.

You must go to the website to set your profile picture.

I discussed the qualities of this app in depth with Johnny Winter, the editor at Mactuts+. We came to the conclusion that there’s a lot of work to be done on the app before we would want to use it in our daily lives. The menu bar icon, for example, is in color. Since all the rest of mine are black and white, I’d like to keep the trend going, but there’s not an option for it. In fact, there are no preferences at all. The settings window only lets you log out and edit your account, and the latter is on a webpage.

Since we the app didn’t fare as well as we’d hoped, we drew up a list of things it needs.

  • The dock icon is always visible and there’s not a button to hide it. Since it’s a menu bar app, this shouldn’t be the case.
  • An audible cue letting you know when the recording has started would be nice.
  • You can import your contacts once, but after that the app doesn’t refresh them, so any new email addresses you’ve added won’t show up.
  • You get a notification that someone has sent you a message, but it’s with the in-app notifications. Why not use the more user-friendly Notification Center?
  • When you receive a message, you can play it in the background while you continue work, but when it’s finished there’s no prompt to reply. I’d like to at least see a global shortcut for this, if not an automatic reply (with an option to switch it on and off).
  • Setting an avatar is complicated. You must open the app, click the settings icon, and select Edit Profile. You will then be redirected to a webpage where you can upload an image. Why can’t it just be integrated?

The Idea is Still Great

There aren't a lot of options.

There aren’t a lot of options.

Pling is by no means a complete disaster. It’s quite the opposite, actually. I like what the developers have done with the idea of voice messaging. Since there’s support for group messaging, it’s practical to use Pling for collaboration with a team, or just to quickly talk with a friend.

Now, we know Pling fulfills its purpose in a decent manner. Is it realistic? No, not really. I don’t see myself using it every day, and probably not even every week. It’s more of a circumstance app than anything. Like with Clear, it’s cool to see that people are using trackpads for more than just scrolling, but other than that it’s not very useful. As I sit here typing this, I try to think of a proper use for Pling, but most of them are just one-time applications. It’s a shame, really.

Delay Start: Take a Load Off of Login Items

If you’re a devotee of Login Items, you may have begun to feel a certain heaviness in your Mac’s startup. Login Items tells OS X what it should launch when you turn your computer on, and I’ve been known to throw just about everything I’m going to need for the day in there. Too much, though, and you may begin to notice a lag.

Holding off on launching all of those applications would go a long way to helping, but I’m the impatient type. It seems Delay Start, a tiny app with one function, will do the waiting for me, though, so I can stagger how my apps are opened and stop bogging down my Login Items quite so much. We’ll see how much of a difference this uni-tasker can make.

Hold Your Horses

Delay Start has a pretty simple job to do, but it could really make a difference for those of us with older Macs. If you have a lot of apps you like to open on startup, you may have already added all of them to your Login Items in System Preferences, and they launch whenever you log in to your Mac. It seems like a great way to save some time, because everything you need to start the day is already open for you without you having to do a thing. The problem is that if your Mac has to load a bunch of extra stuff all at once when you log in, it can really slow the whole process down, especially if your computer is less than new.

Put apps that you want to open at login into the list in Delay Start.

Put apps that you want to open at login into the list in Delay Start.

The solution would be to stagger how OS X launches your apps, but Login Items doesn’t let you set priorities or time delays. Delay Start does, though, and it’s really simple to set up. Open up the app, and you’ll see a list box where you can add all the applications you want Delay Start to launch. Add anything you want Delay Start to manage when you log in here. Set how many seconds Delay Start should take to complete the launch, and remember, the more stuff you have going on at startup, the longer your should let Delay Start take.

So far, so good, but you’ll want to talk a stroll over to your Login Items in System Preferences and remove anything Delay Start is going to control. No need to launch it twice. You probably won’t want to remove everything, though. Look out for “helper” apps that make another app function correctly. Those helper apps can be a pain to find for yourself, and you may have trouble getting them into Delay Start. Of course, if it’s something you’re not really using, feel free to remove it from your Login Items altogether.

Before you’re done, you’re going to need to add Delay Start itself to your Login Items. That way, you’ll still have all of your apps open and ready for you when you turn on your computer. Everything will just be a bit less strained, and despite the inherent delay, you may find your computer’s up and running even more quickly than before.

You'll want to set plenty of time for your system to finish startup.

You’ll want to set plenty of time for your system to finish startup.

Things to Think About

Delay Start probably works best if you have a lot of resource hogging apps you need to have open as soon as you launch OS X. You may absolutely need the Adobe CS range of apps the moment you turn on your computer, but forcing your Mac to open all of that while it’s still trying to figure out what day it is and if it’s got a clean pair of pants to wear is a bit much for it to bear. If you’ve got to have all of that, pop those apps into Delay Start and let them chill thirty seconds until everything else is up and moving.

Something I immediately wished had been included, though, was multiple app lists. For instance, I often find that I launch a lot of the same apps together, like Word, Excel and TextEdit, so it would be great to put them all together in Delay Start. If I later want to launch a second group of apps, though, I have to dig them out one by one. Delay Start would make a great app for setting up mini workflows, if only you could create multiple lists of apps.

It would be great to create mini workflows of similar apps.

It would be great to create mini workflows of similar apps.

Unfortunately, Delay Start doesn’t open your apps up in the background. This is an option I depend on in Login Items, because while there’s a lot of stuff I like to have running all of the time, I don’t necessarily like to always see all of it. So while Delay Start may save you some memory at launch, what it won’t save you is any screen real estate. If you don’t actually want all of those windows open, you’re going to have to go around minimizing them all.

Final Thoughts

Delay Start is perfect if you have a bunch of apps you jump right into when you turn on your computer. Add all of those to Delay Start’s launch list, and you’re ready to go. Even if you don’t want everything open right when you get going for the day, you can still hit Delay Start and launch everything you’re going to use together.

What you can’t do, what Delay Start wasn’t built for, was creating separate lists of apps to launch throughout the day. I think just that extra feature would make Delay Start vastly more useful and get it out of the category of uni-taskers. That’s okay, because Delay Start is still pretty useful, especially for those of use with older machines that can’t take the strain of launching a million and one apps all at one time. Get the apps that can wait a minute into Delay Start, and save a bit of frustration every time you turn on your computer.