Right Enterprises

home  |  tips  |  software of the day  |  about us  |  contact us

search right enterprises - powered by freefind
SOFTWARE OF THE DAY - VIJOURNAL & ACIDSEARCH

Hi All,

Key Combination of the Day

Control-F2 (Function-Control-F2 on laptops) then Return


Pressing Control-F2 (or Function-Control-F2 on laptops) then Return will pop down the Apple Menu. Use the right and left arrows to access other menus. In any menu, type the first letter of the option you want to jump to it (you can also use the up and down arrows for this). Now you can navigate the menu bar without ever having to use your mouse.




Shareware of the Day:

viJournal - Your life here.

viJournal

viJournal is designed as an analogue of the good old-fashioned page-a-day bound diary - the kind you buy in a stationer's. You write your entries under dated headers and save them collectively by month and year.

viJournal's got tons of features for power-journalers, whilst being friendly, clean and easy for all daily diarists to use.

In fact, it has more features than you can shake a stick at (unless it's a very big stick and you're prepared for some serious shaking). Let's look at a few of them.

One day at a time
Like in a real journal, each viJournal entry represents one day. What, only one entry per day? Actually, it's better than that. Way better. There's lots of flexibility built in which lets you organise your journal the way you want it. For a start, you can have as many journals as you want. Have one journal for your personal diary, another as a research log, another for blogging... the possibilities are endless.

If you'd prefer to have all those categories within one journal, you can use sessions. Sessions let you break up your daily entries into separate sub-entries, which can be accessed handily via Safari-style tabs.

viJournal also provides you with a handy note pad, tucked away in a drawer. You get a new note with each day's entry, and you can choose to carry over the previous day's note when creating a new entry. Useful for making running to-do lists, for example.

Finding your way around
You can navigate your entries in a variety of ways. Most people like to use the entry browser, which gives you a list of all the entries in your journal. For those who like widgety controls, there's a calendar.

viJournal remembers which entries you've looked at recently. You can step back through recently viewed entries just as you would step through visited pages in your web browser.

Finally, there are local hyperlinks. You can add http and file hyperlinks to your entry text. You can also link to other journal entries. Hyperlinks are colour-coded, so you can see at a glance which type is which.

Words, pictures and music
Pictures can be included in your journal entries in two ways. Either drop them directly into the text, or for a more organised approach, drop them in viJournal's daily thumbnail gallery. You get a new gallery for each day. All you have to do to see the full-size images is roll the mouse over the thumbnails.

If there's a piece of music you'd like to remember, associated with a particular time, you can insert clickable iTunes markers. Just choose the currently playing track, or drag and drop tracks from iTunes to create a marker. Later, when you want to remember what you were listening to when you wrote that entry, just click the marker, and iTunes will play that track.

Keeping in sync
Say you use viJournal on your desktop Mac at home, but you also like to write your journal on the road or at work, using your laptop. You can keep them both synchronized with viJournal's built-in Journal Syncing. All you need is a FireWire or network connection.

But I don't like brushed metal!
Okay, so some of you have perverted tastes. Don't worry, we've catered for you. viJournal has an Aqua option.

What else do you get?
So, those are some of the key features. We haven't covered any of them in much detail, and we haven't even mentioned in-text checkboxes or entry export or emailing entries or the Drop Box (which lets you store images, files and text clippings). Then there's search-and-replace (with regular expression support for smart guys), backup and restore and autosave. There's a full-screen editing mode, so you can compose your entries without distractions. And finally (insert fanfare) there's blogging.


More info and download link here:

<http://freespace.virgin.net/jeremy.dronfield/skoobysoft/vijournal/vijournal.html>



Freeware of the Day:

AcidSearch - enhance Safari's search.


AcidSearch

AcidSearch is a search enhancement for Safari. It adds unlimited "Search Channels" to the Google search field. Channels can be customized in a nearly infinite variety of ways. AcidSearch also includes powerful features such as JavaScript support, the ability to import iSeek and Butler Search Sites, true hierarchical menu organization, and the ability to search multiple search engines at the same time. AcidSearch also allows you to access your search channels with key equivalents, shortcuts (a la SafariKeywords), and a contextual menu. It patches Safari using Mike Solomon's great SIMBL InputManager. AcidSearch is free software, and will always be free. If you like AcidSearch a lot, and wish to reward me for my development efforts, you are welcome to donate. AcidSearch is available in English, Japanese, Italian, French, and traditional Chinese.

More info and download link here:

<http://www.pozytron.com/?acidsearch>

Regards...
Gordon



copyright 2006-2007, right enterprises
last updated friday april 27, 2007