
- SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? MANUALS
- SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? UPGRADE
- SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? FULL
- SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? PRO
Perhaps it’s overestimating my ability to find interesting things to read, but I don’t trust my friends and the Internet at large to educate and entertain me. Gordon’s setup is just one in a series of Sweet Mac Setups.Īlex Payne: The problem with abdicating your content consumption to other people, though, is other people. Luckily, I have a bunch of friends who are not such early adopters I can sell last year’s model on to. So when they release a new one, I suspect I will be there.
SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? UPGRADE
My iPhone is a 3GS I appear to have Compulsive Upgrade Disorder when it comes to these things.
SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? FULL
Do you own any other Mac gear?Ī Time Capsule at home for backups a large box under the bed full of old cables, power supplies and about 7 different Apple laptop display dongles of various vintages, and a pristine Mac SE that still goes bong when you turn it on – I must find an old keyboard and mouse so I can play with it properly! 6. On the Mac, TextWrangler is my editor of choice on the PC-side, SciTe is rather good. The excellent FlickrExporter for Aperture is also used frequently for my Flickr uploads.

I’ve recently converted to Aperture for this, and am gradually getting a handle on it. The venerable but incomparable GraphicConverter is still in my Dock, and used almost daily, even after all these years.įor my side-line in architectural heritage, I take a lot of photos, and managing them is a bit of a nightmare. I’ve recently started using Things (thanks to the review on this very site) to manage my work to do lists, and its ability to sync with the iPhone equivalent is crucial to keeping me (relatively) organised. I use Spaces to keep things separated – the default one has Mail and iCal which are always open, another with a bunch of terminal windows for local servers, etc., another for Safari and Tweetie, and one for Things.

There’s always some Terminal windows open, and often some stuff running over X-windows from our Sun servers too.
SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? MANUALS
I write and edit manuals and other technical documentation for in-house software, and I could do a lot more on the Mac rather than in Windows if there was still a Mac version of Framemaker (are you listening, Adobe?!). I use Synergy to share a single mouse and keyboard between the two machines I couldn’t live without it. What software do you use on a daily basis, and for what do you use it? The cinema displays were gradually purchased over time – I started out with just one of them and added more as budgets allowed. The Mac Mini is so I don’t have to spend all day in Windows land, and it runs everything else.
SET TEXTWRANGLER THE DEFAULT EDITOR FOR FORTRAN CODE ON OSX? PRO
Pleasingly, the Mac Pro was purchased after I specced up the equivalent Dell workstation at the time, which was nearly UKP £2000 more expensive (!).

As a result, the Mac Pro is running Windows XP in Bootcamp rather than MacOS X. that I actually get paid for) involves tying together old legacy Visual Basic and Fortran code and trying to make it play nicely together, so Windows is a necessity. I’ve three 20in Cinema Displays between them one on the Mac Mini, and two on the Mac Pro, with a single mouse and keyboard shared between them.Īt home, a first generation unibody 13in MacBook. What does your desk look like?Īt work have a Mac Pro (2x Dual Core 2.66Ghz) as my primary workstation, and a Mac Mini 1.66Ghz Core Duo.

In his spare time, he runs the online Scottish Cinemas project to catalogue, record and research old cinema and theatre buildings. He has been described in the newspapers as a ‘boffin’ during attempts to promote Chemistry as a fun and interesting subject through the medium of a life-size fibreglass cow, and as an ‘expert’ when trying to convince people not to knock down interesting old buildings unnecessarily. He is a part-time programmer, part-time webmaster, part-time IT support helper, and part-time architectural heritage campaigner.
