Must Have Mac Menu Bar Apps

Updated: 4/28/09

Some of my Mac’s RAM is consumed by some highly useful apps that constantly run from startup to shutdown on my Mac. Below are these apps, why I use them and a link to download them.

Caffeine
Caffeine is a simple but useful app that keeps your mac from going to sleep. This is useful for me because when I run my slide show at weddings I do not want my monitor going to sleep. This is also useful on my laptop when I am watching videos on Hulu or reading long blog articles. With Caffeine installed you simply click it to make it run, and click it to make it stop. Download

Radium
Radium is a internet radio player for the menu bar that allows you to listen to XMRadio, AOL Radio and more right in your menu bar. I love this, I have XMRadio Online and always forget to use it because you have to listen in a browser. When the browser thinks it would freeze my music. For the most part I believe AOL Radio is free and XM is $7.99 a month but you can get 3 days free if you want to try it. Radium is free but you can get the registered version for as little as a $4.00 donation which I went ahead and did on my laptop and my wife’s. Download Radium

Devicescape
Devicescape allows me to login to Starbucks or AT&T Wifi with out going to their website and entering my password each time. I simply open up my laptop, it recognizes the access point and connects me. Gone are the days of remembering Wifi passwords and logins. Download

Soundsource
I often record podcasts and video podcasts. I use an external mic that runs through a mixer. Before the days of Soundsource I would have to open the control panel, change input sources and remember to change it back later so I could access the internal mic. Soundsource lets me control all audio from the menu bar. Download

Twitterrific
I use Twitterrific on my mac for sending and receiving tweets. I don’t need all of the fancy bells and whistles that apps like Tweetdeck and some of the others offer. I just want to post and reply to tweets. Iconfactory offers a free ad supported version. The ads are not annoying and do not show up often. Download

Menumeter
Menumeter helps me see what kind of RAM I am dealing with. On my laptop I often run Photoshop and Lightroom along with other apps, it’s nice to know where my RAM usage is so I can quit a program if need be. Download

All of these apps were designed to work only in the menu bar. Best part, they are free. Some other great apps that run in the menu bar as well as their own windows are Evernote, Littlesnitch and LittleSnapper. A couple of apps that I really like but cost a few dollars are Bokeh and Mousepose.

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Not Spending is Not the Answer

There is a fascinating concept called The Paradox of Thrift developed by John Maynard Keynes. This concept states that in a time of recession if we cease to spend, it will only drive us further into recession. It makes sense right? So in a time of recession when we need to do life smarter, what should we invest in? I say, invest in yourself.

[audio:090205_notspendingisnottheanswer.mp3]

Why You Should Be Online Talking About Everything

People often ask me why I am on all of these social networks talking about my life and what I do professionally all day. The answer is simple. When people think about photography or website design I want them to be thinking about me. In today’s podcast I talk about why you should be on Twitter, Facebook, Myspace and other social networks talking about your day to day.

[audio:090202_talkabouteverything.mp3]

Marketing is not a department, Invest In Your Network

Your Network is your Net Worth. I have been preaching this for a while now and it is true. Your worth or the worth of your business is determined by the amount of people and the quality of the things they have to say about you or your service. Marketing is not a department, it is the sum of the people you or your business interacts with. In today’s podcast I discuss ideas related to the people that are out there inadvertently marketing you and your business.

[audio:090122_investinnetwork.mp3]

If you like this Podcast please be sure to subscribe by clicking the iTunes button in the right sidebar.

Reinvent Communication, Avoid The Easy Road

Communication has became broken over the last 10 years. Since email and text messaging we have been able to say what we want to say with out expressing it or putting ourselves on the line. There is something about face to face communication that is “real.” Email and text messaging is good for directions to a location or to discuss something neutral but when it comes to communicating feelings email and text misses the bus. In this podcast I discuss why you should avoid discussing sensitive matters with people through email. If you care about your customers, employees, and prospects, deal with them by voice.

[audio:090122_communication.mp3]

If you like this podcast, please subscribe using the iTunes button in the sidebar on the right.

Communicating Service Quality

Most of us know that just stating that you are good at what you do is not good enough, it may even come across as bragging, which we all know is bad news. You want to be humble but at the same time convince your prospects that you are the best decision they could possibly make. People are not looking for the greatest solution provider available they are looking to avoid making a bad decision. Listen to my podcast and then let me know your thoughts on Communicating Service Quality below.

[audio:090122_servicequality.mp3]

If you enjoy my podcast you can subscribe in iTunes by clicking the iTunes icon in the sidebar on the right. It’s free!

Customer Care, Doesn’t Really Care

Today I had an interesting interaction with an AT&T representative. In the podcast I will get into the actual situation but she said “Customer care, doesn’t really care.” She hit the nail on the head. In the corporate world today, customer service is not important to them. They have a strong hold on a market so they do not feel the need to offer anything other then a body to answer the phone and read a script. Today I felt the need to share this experience and the thoughts it brought to mind about customer service. Take a listen.

[audio:090122_customercare.mp3]

If you like my podcasts you can subscribe. Click the iTunes link on the right. It’s Free!

My 300 Look Photoshop Tutorial is on PSDTUTS!

I subscribe to PSDTuts feed and have always loved and admired the tutorials they share with all of us. To my surprise I was reading my feeds and say my own name in a post. They featured my screencast on creating the look from the movie 300 in Photoshop. Pretty amazing!

Here is a link to the post on PSDTuts

View the tutorial on Vimeo.Com: http://vimeo.com/777203
I have the Camera Raw preset for sale on my website: https://blog.jeradhill.com/store

psdtuts

What a profound increase in views that this post has caused for my screencast.

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Listing Prices vs. Requesting a Quote

I have been doing some testing over the last few months on my websites in regards to how I share pricing information with customers. Most of this year I have had pricing listed on my photography website and a base starting price listed on my website design portfolio website. Just recently I started playing with request forms on my websites. I have removed pricing information and replaced it with a request form and had decent results in the last few days.

What are your thoughts on listing your prices opposed to having a form to request a quote. How has it worked for you either way? I am interested to hear the thoughts of others from other business owners perspectives as well as consumers.

Clearwire, stop blocking me from working!

When Clearwire service came out I jumped on board. It sounded like the best thing since sliced bread as far as wireless internet service. I signed up for a 2 year agreement with Clearwire and rigged up a small Apple Base Station on the side of it making it a mobile internet device. It worked great from my office location but horrible from home. I moved across town and it got even worse, at this point I had Cable internet in my home office and Clearwire. I would take it with me to coffee shops and Starbucks and let everybody leech off of it when it did connect to the internet. Of course now that would not be necessary but a few years ago it was great. After doing this for a couple of months I received a call from Clearwire in which they explained to me that I was using my Clearwire modem at to many different locations and that I would need to upgrade to an account that would allow more locations. Anyhow, I am getting off topic…

After my 2 years were up, which felt like a 2 year sentence, I switched to AT&T and got a Wifi card which works much better albeit just as slow as the Clearwire.

There are several businesses in my local area which provide Clearwire Wifi for free to their customers. One such busienss is Coffee Creek. I frequent Coffee Creek often because they have great coffee and with free Wifi I can work from there as well. However because Clearwire continues to be a hater I can not access my home office Mac because of the way Clearwire does things.

Back to my Mac does not work because Clearwire does not support NAT port mapping. I was not able to get it to work when I was at my Father’s house who also has Clearwire. I find it interesting that through AT&T’s Wifi in Starbucks I can connect to my home Mac. Obviously this has nothing to do with Coffee Creek, or my Father for that matter. Clearwire just doesn’t get it. Because of the way their network runs I am unable to connect to any other computer using my Mobile Me account.

I do not understand why a company would produce a product and limit its capabilities to work with the popular technology that is out there. I am not complaining in hopes that somebody will comment a logical explanation as to why this is. I am just making an observation as to why many companies fail. I don’t see Clearwire going anywhere as a company because of all of the failures they have. They are not actively growing their network to provide better service in my area, they are just hoping that the people who live outside of the distance that cable and DSL providers reach never gain access to anything else. I have yet to come across a happy Clearwire customer. Clearwire has a powerful place in the industry right now to do great things if only they would do them. Instead they leave up road blocks, probably unintentionally that upset people like me that would have stood on a soap box and sang their praises.