Macworld Review: Peak 4.1
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News: BIAS unveils Peak Pro 5, Peak Pro
XT 5
News: BIAS unveils Peak Pro 5, Peak Pro
XT 5
04/11/2005 08:43 AMBIAS Inc. unveiled in Frankfurt, Germany late last week Peak Pro 5,
the next generation of the company's professional stereo recording,
editing and mastering software. BIAS also announced Peak Pro XT 5, a
bundle that will include five brand-new BIAS plug-ins and several
other of the company's popular plug-ins.
Macworld review: Chartsmith 1.2
Macworld review: Chartsmith 1.2
12/02/2003 10:20 PMWhether you're explaining scientific research or discussing a PTA
fundraiser, charts can help your audience quickly grasp complex
numerical relationships. Chartsmith 1.2.3, from Blacksmith
Technologies, lets you turn raw data into spiffy graphs, but a few
interface quirks and frustrating documentation may sometimes slow your
progress.
Macworld week in review
Macworld week in review
02/14/2004 09:24 AMMacCentral's week in review looks back at the week that was in
Macintosh news and information.
Macworld review: HomePod
Macworld review: HomePod
07/06/2004 04:44 PMWith its white plastic design and scroll wheel, Macsense's HomePod is
inspired by Apple's iPod in more ways than its name. But the HomePod,
an MP3 player that streams music over a network from your Mac, doesn't
come close to matching the elegance and ease of use of the
groundbreaking player it seeks to emulate.
Macworld review: IPNetMonitorX 1.4
Macworld review: IPNetMonitorX 1.4
07/21/2004 06:33 PMSustainable Softworks' IPNetMonitorX 1.4 is an all-purpose tool for
troubleshooting network connections. Built primarily for network
administrators and power users, it provides a wealth of information
about how your computer connects to the outside world. Many of
IPNetMonitorX's 17 tools are freely available as part of OS X, and you
can access them via Terminal or the Network Utility application. So
why would you pay for IPNetMonitorX? Because it does a fine job of
unifying these tools within a consistent user interface. It also
offers capabilities that the free tools don't. And IPNetMonitorX
augments existing OS X tools. OS X's Traceroute tool allows only one
type of trace, UDP; IPNetMonitorX adds two more types -- ICMP and
Record Route, which give you the flexibility necessary to get through
firewalls. OS X's version of the Port Scan tool lets you conduct only
TCP scans, but IPNetMonitorX lets you conduct TCP and UDP scans.
Macworld Review: DVD Studio Pro 3.0
Macworld Review: DVD Studio Pro 3.0
08/20/2004 02:37 PMMacworld review: Revolution 2.1
Macworld review: Revolution 2.1
01/28/2004 03:22 AMHyperCard? That's dead, isn't it? Oh, sure, it was great back in the
1980s. So versatile it defies ready definition, HyperCard lets
ordinary people create their own software without having to conform to
the strict rules of a formal programming language. But the last time
Apple updated it (1998), Macs were made out of vacuum tubes and
corncobs. AppleScript Studio and RealBasic, while they're nowhere near
as easy to learn and use, have stepped into HyperCard's role: the
nonthreatening way to write software. But nonprogrammers everywhere
can now rejoice: Revolution 2.1, a HyperCard-compatible development
environment, has come along with enough power to wake the dead.
Macworld review: PocketMac Pro 3.3
Macworld review: PocketMac Pro 3.3
08/12/2004 03:14 PMLast year, we reviewed PocketMac Pro 2.0, the first application that
allowed PDAs running Microsoft's Windows-only PocketPC OS to interact
with Macs. It didn't make a great impression. Installing and
configuring the software was a long, fiddly process that was certain
to leave you with a clear understanding of what phrases like "kernel
panic" and "stress-related embolism" mean. The program also had a
clumsy, amateurish interface, and it let you exploit only a fraction
of your PocketPC's features.
Macworld review: Timbuktu Pro 7.0
Macworld review: Timbuktu Pro 7.0
06/10/2004 11:35 AMYour friends, family, or coworkers are asking you for Mac help.
They're snowbound and you're sipping a mai tai in Miami Beach, so you
can't just swing by their home or office. Worse, they don't know an
application menu from a folder, so you're not going to get far with
verbal explanations. It's not long before you wish you could get your
hands on their keyboard and mouse and see the screen. Netopia's
Timbuktu Pro solves this very problem. Whether over a TCP/IP network
or via a direct modem connection, you can assist a befuddled user or
administer a remote Mac or PC server as though you were sitting in
front of it. A mainstay of Mac tech support since 1988, Timbuktu now
faces competition from Apple Remote Desktop and the free, open-source
VNC. Timbuktu Pro 7.0 eschews aggressive enhancements, however, and
stays the course with Panther compatibility and a handful of new
features.
Macworld review: Mailsmith 2.0
Macworld review: Mailsmith 2.0
11/05/2003 06:03 PMContrary to what the folks cavorting in cargo-pants commercials might
say, no single style is going to appeal to everyone. The fact that
there are so many e-mail clients competing with Apple's free Mail app
doesn't necessarily mean that Mail has limitations. No, that fact is
evidence of a universal truth: All e-mail users are looking for the
one shining feature that grabs their attention and sets their favorite
e-mail application apart from the rest. The bling-bling of Bare Bones
Software's e-mail program, Mailsmith, has always been the ability to
automate all the drudgy, soul-sucking aspects of having a high-volume
e-mail address. This legacy continues with the Mac OS X–only
Mailsmith 2.0.
Macworld review: Suitcase X1
Macworld review: Suitcase X1
01/23/2004 05:26 PMManaging your fonts can be as painful as getting your teeth cleaned.
You do it only when you have to, and it's no fun. Just as you hope for
a dentist who works quickly, efficiently, and gently, you want a
font-management application that helps you find, group, preview, and
access your fonts painlessly. Extensis's Suitcase X1 (pronounced
eleven) has an improved windowpane interface that makes font
management this easy. And it's quite fast in Classic, Jaguar, and
Panther (Panther users will have to download a patch).
Macworld review: EyeTV 200
Macworld review: EyeTV 200
07/01/2004 01:42 PMWhen Elgato Systems introduced the EyeTV two years ago, the company
brought the benefits of digital-video recorders to the Mac. The new
EyeTV 200 improves on the original USB model by offering better
flexibility, higher-quality video, a remote control, and enough
bandwidth to properly capture and display MPEG-2 video.
Macworld review: iBook G4s
Macworld review: iBook G4s
02/19/2004 06:20 PMMacworld review: Soundtrack 1.0
Macworld review: Soundtrack 1.0
12/02/2003 12:31 AMApple's Soundtrack made its debut last June, as part of the massive
video-editing bundle Final Cut Pro 4. But now the same Soundtrack
software is available as a stand-alone product. This puts Soundtrack
within reach of video editors, Web designers, and content providers
who don't need the rest of the Final Cut Pro 4 package.
Macworld review: You Synchronize
Macworld review: You Synchronize
06/24/2004 03:37 AMMacworld review: Retrospect 6.0
Macworld review: Retrospect 6.0
06/17/2004 01:19 PMEveryone has a mission-critical application -- that one program they
can't work without (Adobe Photoshop, Microsoft Excel, or Apple's Final
Cut Pro, for example). But backup programs are mission critical for
all users, no matter how they earn a living. Dantz Development's
Retrospect backup software, the most popular of this genre, performs
full and incremental backups of local and networked Macs and saves
data to a wide variety of storage devices. Many people waited to
upgrade to Mac OS X until Retrospect 5.0 was available for the
platform. And many people have also held off on upgrading their
servers to Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), due to its incompatibilities with
Retrospect 5.1. Retrospect 6.0 addresses those incompatibilities but
otherwise offers only a few new features, which are aimed at people
using Retrospect to back up very large amounts of data.
Macworld review: Mac GEMS
Macworld review: Mac GEMS
11/06/2003 05:07 PMI'm a big fan of Mac OS X, but I admit that there are a few things I
miss about OS 9. The Internet control panel, for one, let you
customize helper applications -- the utilities and apps that process
URLs and files you're likely to encounter on the Web and in e-mail
messages. OS X includes the same settings, but apart from letting you
choose your e-mail client and Web browser, it doesn't give you a way
to edit those settings. (Microsoft Internet Explorer does let you
change some of them.)
Macworld Review: Universe 5.0
Macworld Review: Universe 5.0
03/19/2003 10:26 PMMacworld Review: PowerBook G4s
Macworld Review: PowerBook G4s
05/24/2004 05:32 PMMacworld review: Dreamweaver MX 2004
Macworld review: Dreamweaver MX 2004
12/19/2003 06:23 PMDreamweaver has become an indispensable part of any Web-site
developer's tool kit, and Dreamweaver MX 2004 is the latest
incarnation of Macromedia's powerful Web-site– development tool.
Macworld review: Canvas 9 Pro Edition
Macworld review: Canvas 9 Pro Edition
01/29/2004 04:51 AMACD Systems' Canvas 9 Professional Edition is primarily for technical
illustrators who need to design precision graphics. It can also
pinch-hit as an image editor or an illustration program -- plus, it
can serve as a page-layout, drawing, presentation, and Web-site
program. Surprisingly, Canvas does all of these tasks well, so it's an
attractive technical tool for illustrators who also like to exercise
their creativity.
Macworld review: Digital Performer 4.1
Macworld review: Digital Performer 4.1
12/31/2003 03:34 PMDigital Performer's friendly yet powerful interface will be familiar
to veteran users, and it lets new users get right to work with minimal
setup. The program shines when burdened with moderate-to-heavy
workloads, and its new Freeze feature helps maximize the number of
tracks you can work with. (Note that we tested with Jaguar, using
Digital Performer 4.1, not with Panther using version 4.11.)
Macworld review: 15-inch PowerBook G4s
Macworld review: 15-inch PowerBook G4s
10/29/2003 03:24 AMEight months after Apple announced its smallest and largest PowerBook
G4s -- the 12-inch and 17-inch PowerBook G4s, in aluminum, not
Titanium -- Apple released the laptop many professional Mac users had
been waiting for -- the aluminum 15-inch PowerBook G4. With its slick
performance, bright screen, and support for USB 2.0, FireWire 800,
AirPort Extreme, and Bluetooth, this laptop was worth the wait. But
people who've received PowerBooks with loose latches or video problems
may wish that Apple had taken a bit more time to iron out kinks.
Macworld review: Wacom Graphire3 6x8
Macworld review: Wacom Graphire3 6x8
06/15/2004 04:27 PMFor the graphics user who doesn't have a tablet, the $200 Graphire3
6x8, the latest update to Wacom's consumer line of tablets, is too
good a deal to pass up. Bundled with Adobe Photoshop Elements 1.0 (for
Mac OS 9) and Corel Painter Classic (for Mac OS X), it is a sturdy
graphics workstation right out of the box.
Macworld review: Fireworks MX 2004
Macworld review: Fireworks MX 2004
12/23/2003 05:42 PMMacromedia's Fireworks is the established standard application for
creating and optimizing graphics for the Web. The company has given it
an overhaul as part of the Studio MX 2004 release, but we were curious
as to how much Macromedia would improve the new version with added
features and enhancements.
Macworld review: Carrara Studio 3
Macworld review: Carrara Studio 3
03/06/2004 01:55 AMAlthough Eovia's Carrara Studio 3 boasts an impressive list of new
features, such as HDRI (High Dynamic Range Imaging) support and new
controls for subdivision surfaces modeling, it's the program's $399
price tag that will sway many people. But don't let its modest price
fool you -- Carrara has a large array of high-end tools, wrapped in a
package that new and experienced users will find comfortable.
Originally developed by MetaCreations, Carrara has an interface
similar in form and function to that of packages such as Bryce and
Kai's Power Tools, both from Corel, and Curious Labs' Poser. If you're
familiar with any of these programs, you'll recognize many of
Carrara's modeling and navigation tools.
Macworld review: Speed Download 2.3
Macworld review: Speed Download 2.3
06/22/2004 09:26 AMFor some people, Internet downloads are never fast enough. If you're
one of them, you might be tempted by Speed Download 2.3.4, from
YazSoft, which is supposed to accelerate the speed at which files
download from the Internet. But in our tests, Speed Download did
almost nothing to speed up downloads. And in some instances, files
took longer to download with Speed Download than without it. Luckily,
the program has other virtues.
Macworld review: ArtMatic Voyager 1.1
Macworld review: ArtMatic Voyager 1.1
08/03/2004 04:34 PMU&I's landscape-generation application, ArtMatic Voyager 1.1.2, nearly
caused me to miss my deadline. No, not because the program is
difficult to understand or control -- a child could create
breathtaking photo-realistic vistas with it. Voyager is just so much
fun that hours evaporate as you happily tweak the scenery -- jumping
from one location in a preset world to another, raising the altitude
here, and making the water a bit more transparent there.
Macworld review: Flash MX 2004
Macworld review: Flash MX 2004
12/30/2003 03:57 AMWith Flash MX 2004, Macromedia has extended the functionality of
previous versions, and released a Professional edition with some
exciting new features for power users, albeit at a cost: sluggish
performance.
Macworld review: Font Doctor 6
Macworld review: Font Doctor 6
05/28/2004 05:04 PMFont Doctor is a utility you don't ever want to have to use. But when
your fonts act funky or when they're in disarray, then Font Doctor 6
becomes your best friend. It not only repairs corrupt fonts and
organizes them into neat folders, but also converts Windows fonts into
Mac fonts, and vice versa. Now with a faster and simpler interface,
Font Doctor, which has been updated for Panther, is a great complement
to full-featured font-activation programs such as Suitcase, which
includes Font Doctor. The $20 upgrade price certainly makes upgrading
worthwhile for current users.
Macworld review: Cleaning utilities
Macworld review: Cleaning utilities
01/17/2004 10:43 PMBrowser cache files, duplicate documents, and unneeded programs waste
space, and Spring Cleaning 6.0 and Internet Cleanup 1.0, both from
Aladdin Systems, offer ways to sort through your files and toss the
trash. Spring Cleaning can find and remove almost any file, while
Internet Cleanup specializes in removing browser-related files and
blocking pop-up browser windows. These tools are handy starting points
for cleaning up your machine, but be sure to study the file list
before you press delete -- both programs occasionally target needed
files.
Macworld Review: The Game Room
Macworld Review: The Game Room
11/19/2003 05:46 PMMacworld review: Dragon Burn 3.1
Macworld review: Dragon Burn 3.1
04/22/2004 02:28 AMDragon Burn 3.1.17, an inexpensive disc-burning application from
NewTech Infosystems, promises some intriguing features that Mac OS and
Roxio's Toast 6 Titanium do not offer. Among these features are
simultaneous burning on multiple recorders, multisession DVD-R
burning, and conversion of an iTunes playlist's AAC files to AIFF
files for an audio CD. Regrettably, too many of its features work
poorly (or not at all).
Macworld review: ProofMaster Adesso
Macworld review: ProofMaster Adesso
08/04/2004 01:42 PMPerfectProof's $499 ProofMaster Adesso is billed as a digital-proofing
RIP (raster image processor). And while it does simplify in-house
color proofing for designers and photographers, ProofMaster Adesso is
more like a superior ink-jet printer driver.
Macworld review: Adobe InDesign CS
Macworld review: Adobe InDesign CS
01/22/2004 02:13 AMInDesign CS is a subtle yet very powerful update to Adobe's publishing
flagship. The previous version, InDesign 2.0, introduced most of the
key features that made the young program a publishing powerhouse: the
word-processor–like table editor, the Photoshop-level transparency
features, and highly sophisticated typographic control. This version
brings enhancements to many of these features, and it has several
sensational new ones, such as nested styles and a much more efficient
console for accessing text and object attributes. Although InDesign's
interface is still somewhat complex, this is a more capable and more
functional InDesign; in due time, this program will easily claim the
publishing crown.
Macworld review: Adobe Photoshop CS
Macworld review: Adobe Photoshop CS
01/22/2004 02:13 AMAt the core of Adobe's Creative Suite strategy is the unity,
integration, and simultaneous release of its major design
applications. Photoshop CS (version 8) is a broad and deep upgrade to
the company's anchor image editor. Despite its low-key presentation --
its interface is almost the same as version 7's -- it has amazing new
tools for Photoshop's traditional users. New features, subtly
sprinkled throughout the program, dramatically enhance those users'
capabilities and control over their images. Photographers, artists,
graphic designers, Web designers, and video specialists will see
significant improvements in their images and in the imaging process,
but there's no burdensome learning curve.
Macworld review: Final Cut Express 2
Macworld review: Final Cut Express 2
04/21/2004 02:11 AMSoftware companies nearly always build new versions of software on top
of old versions, a practice similar to the way you'd add a second
story to a too-small house. But in Final Cut Express 2.0's case, Apple
moved to a completely new neighborhood, scrapping Final Cut Express
1.0 and basing its successor on Final Cut Pro 4, which included
performance and audio-related improvements, as well as real-time
effects previews. Now intermediate DV enthusiasts will benefit
directly from these great new features and pay less than a third of
Final Cut Pro's price.
Macworld review: Toast 6 Titanium
Macworld review: Toast 6 Titanium
12/02/2003 12:32 AMThe Mac's built-in CD- and DVD-burning capabilities are great, but
they may not be sufficient for burning a lot of CDs or DVDs. For
people who demand powerful burning software, there's Roxio's Toast.
Macworld review: Final Draft 7
Macworld review: Final Draft 7
07/27/2004 04:41 PMIt can safely be argued that Final Draft is the industry-standard
application for script writers. But while Final Draft 7 adds a few
nice features to the program's repertoire, this buggy new version
doesn't live up to its predecessors' good reputation.
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Macworld Review: Peak 4.1