Archive for November, 2007

iCal Syncing Sharing

BusySync: Multi-User Calendar Sharing for iCal – Designed for families and small workgroups, Continue reading »

Protect Yourself from the QuickTime RTSP Vulnerability

TidBITS has published an article with the above title. By now you have probably heard about the announcement from the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team concerning a vulnerability in Quicktime on both Macs and PCs. Continue reading »

Yummy FTP

Yummy Software has released Yummy FTP 1.7 for Leopard — an FTP, FTP SSL/TLS, and SFTP client that combines all the best features available in other file transfer solutions Continue reading »

Microspot Interiors Professional

a new version of the popular consumer product with a high quality raytrace renderer and built in modeling tools Continue reading »

The Semi-Hidden Features of Leopard

Ted Landau has written a neat article about the features in Leopard about which we haven’t heard. Continue reading »

15 years of CD Archives?

The voice on the phone was one I hadn’t heard for nearly fifteen years. An old school buddy was calling to ask if I could retrieve the text and content from a directory I produced for our 25th high school reunion.
Oh no! How can I find those files? Continue reading »

George Engel Reviews and Views

Many of you may remember George M Engel, originally at the Upstate Apple Users Group, frequent face at MacWorld Expos? George is now with the Lakeland Florida Mac User Group, publishing the newsletter, and sending his articles out for a much wider audience… Continue reading »

Computer for Christmas?

Joe Showker says:
Some thoughts for the holidays if you are buying a computer. It’s that time of the year when thoughts drift to “what should I get” and “how vulnerable am I” and “what’s cool, what’s not”. Continue reading »

BitClamp Security

Crimson Sky Software Introduces BitClamp – The AppZapper of Encryption Continue reading »

Macintosh Holidays with Apple Pi

CELEBRATE HOLIDAYS WITH MACINTOSH USERS, Rockville, MD, Dec 9, 1:00 p.m. Continue reading »