@joggernut BPM-based playlist creator for iTunes

Check out the second-to-last pick in this week's MacBreak Weekly

http://www.mbwpicks.com/

I know you've assessed a bunch of these tools (feel free to post a list!). If you've used Tangerine, what do you think?

P.S. The RedLaser app for iPhone is sweet!

Picks from MBW 164: Pinch Pull and Tug

October 28th, 2009 · No Comments

fusion3Hardware & software:

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Flippin’ the switch on the PR machine

http://www.sanantoniostartups.com/2009/10/29/how-j2maccom-helps-individuals-small-businesses-and-enterprises-leverage-the-power-of-the-mac-platform-and-shift-to-google-apps/

Thanks to Alan Weinkrantz for producing this profile of J2. Filmed at SAY Sí, we wanted to focus on the benefits of OS X Server, and the fun stuff we’re doing with Google Apps.

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Remote control apps for iPhone/touch

I was planning on installing Touchpad on a client's iPhone this morning. They have a Mac mini media center, and with these apps they can start the music from anywhere in the house.  Glad I saw this rundown. 

I'm still waiting for a cheap solution to control a stereo over wifi. My A/V friend Tom is keeping an eye out, too. It's ridiculous that people have to pay $500 for a "universal" remote — the Logitech Harmony — that doesn't totally suck.     

"iPhone and iPod touch remote controls
Posted on Wednesday Oct 28, 2009 3:15 AM
by Christopher Breen , Macworld.com

Getting up from your couch to “change the channel” on your Mac-based media center is so 1970s. If you’re going to the trouble to mutate a Mac into something that delivers music and video via your AV gear—or even enjoy a movie on a 27-inch iMac across the room—you’ll also want to replicate the experience of watching real TV as much as possible. That means having a remote control that lets you manage the works without a lot of fuss and bother."

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Please welcome our new contributor

I'm really pleased that my dad, Bob Marcus, has accepted my invitation to post to the J2 Blog.

I wouldn't be the geek that I am without my dad. One day, when I was a teenager, he showed me some of the code for the medical-records databases he had written in the 70s. He kept up the project — mission, really — clear through to his retirement: to design an electronic medical records system for OBGYNs that would be the most comprehensive and useful for doctors and staff. He worked in different platforms, and with different vendors, and over time he got to see his industry finally embrace a technology he had long known was inevitable, and had been evangelizing for years. 

Upon retiring in 2004, and being freed from developing on the Windows platform, Dad decided to go Mac. I was all kinds of honored. PowerBook G4 in hand, he quickly got excited by web design, and the then-nascent medium of podcasting. Before long, he redirected his programming expertise to another new idea: music-paced running. He developed a website at jogtunes.com, with a SQL/PHP database of playlists composed by beats-per-minute, selling the tunes in iTunes and Amazon and Rhapsody; then a podcast (iTunes link), based on the same idea, but using independent, "podsafe" music. Now he DJs the workouts of thousands of folks a week, all around the globe. Come on, that's freakin' cool!

Dad had Datapoint terminals in his office. He took me and my brothers to a computer convention, where we witnessed an Apple II playing color images in sequence, almost like a movie! Dad got me a Sinclair ZX81, on which I honed my own [sad] programming skills, but more importantly developed geek cred. and the moment in 1984 when he said "Let's go check out one of those new Macs for a test drive!" — he kicked off my career.

Henceforth, I think I'll use his podcasting handle, Dr. Bob. Bob has been putting iTunes, GarageBand, and Mac web development through much harder paces than I am ever going to, and I know that his posts, besides being spontaneous digital nakhes generators, will be priceless additions to this collection of tech tidbits in our little corner of the interwebs.

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Problems editing info in iTunes

If you find that you can’t edit the “Get Info” fields of an MP3 file in iTunes try this:
Right click (Ctrl-Click) on the file in iTunes and then click on Create MP3 Version. This creates a copy that is editable in “Get Info.” You can consider trashing the original file or keep it just to be on the safe side.

To find the original file, right click it in iTunes, and then click on “Show in Finder.” Then do what you want with it.

This all worked for me on two files I downloaded for my podcast from Mevio’s Music Alley.

Bob
The JogTunes Indie Podcast
JogTunes.com

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Do we need a server?

I remember the first time I became aware of the word “server.” For some reason it sounded very mysterious, something that required arcane tools and deep learning with the elves in the mountains.

Eventually, I came to figure out that a “server” is simply a computer — any computer — that provides “services” to other computers. If you computer can share its files, it’s a file server. If you turn iTunes music sharing on, your computer becomes a music server. If you have a shared printer, your computer has become a print server.

Apple makes it super-easy to turn any Mac into a server by going to Apple menu > System Preferences > Sharing (or Spotlight “sharing”) and turning on any of the services you need. Your Mac will then show up in the “Shared” section of any Finder window. Boom, you got a server.

That said, when most people refer to a server, they’re talking about some machine that doesn’t do anything else, a box that’s tucked away, maybe in a rack or a closet, and always on, with a nice big battery backup, maybe a few hard drives, and fans like a wind tunnel. And most servers on the planet should be that robust; I need Google’s mail servers or my web server at GoDaddy never to go down, or at least, if they do need a reboot, that there’s a backup server waiting next to it in the data center to kick in as soon as its brother goes down.

A lot of businesses have one or more servers at the workplace. Sometimes they’re just file servers, a central repository for the documents that everyone needs access. Sometimes they’re also mail servers. Running your email through a Windows Exchange Server housed in your office was a popular option among Microsoft-certified professionals at a time when outsourced email hosts weren’t as flexible or affordable as they are now.

Again, to be clear: most organizations with fewer than 40 or 50 users would be wasting precious money to purchase Microsoft Small Business Server, when they can sign up with Google Apps either for free or for $50/user/year (40 users for $2,000/year, versus an easy $5,000 just to install and configure, not to mention maintain and troubleshoot, a Windows Server).

So let’s say you just need to share documents among more than 10 people, and you need them available all the time, and time without them costs money. Until this last Tuesday, the best value in a server-class machine was Apple’s Xserve

Way powerful, way configurable, way manageable – The specs on each generation of Xserve have been increasingly impressive, and it starts at a $3,000 base price that has always included the $1,000 OS X Server (unlimited-client; Windows Server starts at 5 users, and costs $50 per user after that). Most Xserve buyers should expect to pay at least $5,000-6,000 for a properly configured unit with 3 hard drives, a redundant supply, external backups, and if one is smart, the AppleCare server support plan. I can usually have a new OS X Server set up, with a few connected workstations, in under 6 hours.

A Bit of History

Apple’s server software (a.k.a. server operating system, or “OS”) is Mac OS X Server, now in version 10.6 (a.k.a. Snow Leopard Server). For so many years, AppleShare server products (still promoted in Australia!) distinguished themselves in IT discourse only by being pretty crappy. It just didn’t have the moxy that system admins were used to getting from Microsoft Windows NT or its descendants. And when OS X Server came out — it was actually the first release of OS X — it was really more of a theory than an operating system. Even though it was built on the well-established UNIX platform, it was buggy and slow, and it had these really weird quirks that made it very frustrating. Certainly it was impossible for an IT administrator to recommend that a business rely on this system for their day-to-day operations. 

Today, OS X Server has evolved into a robust, stable platform, one that’s easy to set up, easy to expand and scale, and like the basic OS X (we might call it “OS X client”), Server is impressively compatible with other platforms and standards. Since OS X Server and the Xserve came into their own, and given products such as Xsan and Final Cut Server, Apple is officially a viable player in the world of business and enterprise.

The Value of a Server

Is all of this worth several thousand dollars to your organization? It sure can be, once you realize the other things you can do with a server, which I’ll get to in a second. First, I have to say that this article is inspired by Apple’s announcement today of a Mac mini server. This $1,000 box is now potentially my favorite item in the entire product line, as I think it spells great things for businesses large and small. Considering that Apple has now slashed the price of the software itself to an unbeatable $500 for unlimited users, buying into a Microsoft server product now just seems unwise and wasteful.

So what can you do with a server? Check this out:

  • File Sharing, Network homes, and Backups: We can tie all of your Macs to your server so that the “home folder” for each user account is stored on the server. This means anybody can use any Mac in the house, and use their own desktop and files and email and settings. And if one computer dies, you put a new one in its place, log that person in, et voila! You’re back in business.

    • Portable Home Directories: This includes laptops, which can sync their accounts to the server, backing themselves up whenever they’re in the office.
  • Software Updates: We can have the server download all your software updates, and the administrator can pick and choose which one should be rolled out. When someone logs in, even a non-admin user, they’ll have an opportunity to install the approved updates, and their Mac only has to go across the office network, not all the way back to Apple’s servers.

  • Preferences: You can choose apply settings for all users in one fell swoop: adding a printer, adding items to the Dock, or automatically mounting a share point [definition]; or perhaps restricting things along the order of parental controls, or preventing or allowing certain applications.

  • NetBoot & NetRestore: You can actually have your Macs start up from a disk image [definition] on the server. If you need to update all Macs, just update the image. A variation on this idea is to have the Macs install themselves from a central image.

Of all of these possibilities, certainly it is having a centralized place for data storage and backup, and for backing up your workstations, that makes in-house servers attractive, and possibly essential, for any organization of any size. 

Keep your head in the cloud

I say possibly essential, because there are now services on the internet, such as Google Docs and DropBox, that have begun replacing server hardware for many people. I am all in favor of using these online applications, with the sole caution that we don’t rely on them to back up our data. It is crucial to keep an on-premises copy of every piece of data that means anything to you, just as keeping an offsite copy is de rigueur in any comprehensive backup scheme. I use a Firefox plug-in that downloads all my Google docs, and I backup that folder to an external hard drive.

But if you need fast, reliable storage that all your computers can see, to centralize your data and keep your Macs humming in unison, there’s nothing like a properly configured OS X Server.

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Something I learned today

Whenever I talk to DW, even for half a minute, I learn a ton. Today,it was about opening ports in one’s firewall, in the NAT (network
address translation) settings. Kind of esoteric stuff, and doesn’t
apply to most of our clients, but here it is, third-hand from one of
Apple’s Open Directory gurus:

It is important – at least in an environment with a large number of
users, say hundreds – for an Open Directory master not to have ports
forwarded directly to it from the Internet. That means, you don’t want
to open, say SSH, or VNC, or FTP, directly from the Internet to your
server. Ports for VPN are apparently an exception, because the server
would see a VPN client as being on the local network anyway. The OD
master doesn’t want to think of itself as being directly on the
Internet. I wonder if this is because of its heavy reliance on DNS.

We don’t service any installations that large, but I saw this as a
coincidence, since I’ve always been very very reluctant to open any
port-forwarded security holes in our clients’ networks, much less
directly to one of their servers. DW has a nice alternative, using a
separate Mac as a Remote Desktop “kiosk” that has ARD permanently
open, and you just forward a port or two to that machine, putting a
couple layers of security between your data and the outside world.

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Definition: share point

From the built-in Mac dictionary:

share point [noun] 1. A folder, hard disk (or hard disk partition), or optical disc that’s accessible over the network. A share point is the point of access at the top level of a group of shared items. Share points can be shared using AFP, SMB, NFS (an export), or FTP.

(Ach, more definitions! Those last things are:
Apple File Protocol, for sharing files between Macs;
Server Messaging Block, which equals Windows file sharing for Mac & Linux;
Network File Sharing, which is a Linux file sharing standard; and
File Transfer Protocol, for sending files across the internet.)
This is one of those tech words we use every day, and that I can’t find a great, more English-y synonym for. Maybe if I just list them all…
share point = network folder, network shared folder, server folder, server volume, network volume, network mount point

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