by Christina Warren on October 17, 2008 at 01:00 PM

Over at TUAW, I listed Coda as one of my favorite applications, and indeed, it is a central part of my web development toolbox. When it comes to straight CSS editing, however, my favorite app is CSSEdit. CSSEdit by MacRabbit is the best CSS editor I have ever used. In fact, before CSSEdit, I was against the entire idea of a CSS editor -- isn't Notepad or TextEdit enough? Sure, but I like to save ...
by Adam Maras on October 16, 2008 at 03:00 PM

I've blogged about it before, and I'll blog about it again. Back when I was just a wee lad of the Internet, I found a most wonderful concept: instant messaging! At the time, I thought MSN Messenger was the coolest thing since the automatic bread slicer. Of course, my best friend preferred Yahoo! Messenger, and the majority of everyone else I knew would use nothing but AOL Instant Messenger. So, I ...
by Jay Hathaway on October 14, 2008 at 02:00 PM

I don't know how I ever lived without Shush. It's an algorithmic white noise generator you can keep in your pocket, and it shows how versatile the iPhone is. I first gave it a shot because it was written by one of my favorite developers, Daniel Jalkut of Red Sweater Software, but I quickly found I needed white noise everywhere. My neighbors were throwing a noisy party that kept me awake. I hit ...
by Jay Hathaway on October 14, 2008 at 10:00 AM

Now that torrent technology has become one of the most popular ways to distribute large files, it's important to find the right Bittorrent client. If you're on a Mac, that's Transmission. I used to be a fan of Azureus (now called Vuze), but I switched to Transmission because it's less cluttered and takes up a lot less screen real-estate. Transmission's not bare-bones in terms of features -- you ...
by Brad Linder on October 13, 2008 at 05:00 PM

So far I've told you about two applications that were so awesome that I had no problem sending some cash to the developers to pay for continued use of the products. But both BeyondTV and Pocket Informant only require one time payments. Sure, you might want to pay for the major upgrades that are released every few years (smaller updates are usually free), but you don't need to keep paying to keep ...
by Brad Linder on October 13, 2008 at 02:00 PM

Yes, your PDA, cellphone, BlackBerry, or whatever it is you carry around in your pocket probably came with a calendar and contact manager. And they probably suck. Pocket Informant doesn't. This personal information management suite was originally designed as a complete replacement for the PIM applications that come with Windows Mobile. It's now available for iPhone and BlackBerry devices as well. ...
by Brad Linder on October 13, 2008 at 10:00 AM

Over the past week we've been bringing you some of our favorite applications of all time. And most of them have been free. I love freeware and open source software. In fact, almost every application I run on my Windows, Windows Mobile, and Linux devices didn't cost me a penny. But I decided to do something a bit different for my favorite apps posts. I want to highlight some of the applications ...
by Lee Mathews on October 9, 2008 at 06:00 PM

I do a lot of troubleshooting on various operating systems for customers, and I've got to provide a lot of phone support. Without VirtualBox, I'd need a whole lot more hardware than I care to cram into my workspace. On a single XP Pro desktop, I've got Windows 98, 2000, Vista, Server 2003, and Ubuntu virtual machines at the ready. Giant hard drives are cheap, ram is cheap, and my CPU has plenty ...
by Lee Mathews on October 9, 2008 at 01:00 PM

For the longest time, I thought I needed to use Dreamweaver to edit my web code. That bothered me. I didn't like the way it handled saving files to my remote server, and it was just too damn bulky for my taste. And there's the price tag. I wasn't really a fan of that either. Fortunately, I discovered Notepad++. It's totally free, extremely powerful, and does everything I need an editor to do (and ...
by Lee Mathews on October 9, 2008 at 10:00 AM

There are a ton of remote control apps to choose from, and I've used plenty. Normally I'm all about the free alternative, but this is one case where I'm completely ok with paying for a product. For ease of setup and use out of the box, I haven't found anything as good as Teamviewer. Yes, Teamviewer is completely free for personal use - and if you're doing the "friend that knows about computers" ...
by Todd Ritter on October 8, 2008 at 05:30 PM

Since I often have to connect to Windows servers (or sometimes workstations) from my Mac laptop, CoRD is my RDP client of choice. CoRD is a free and open-source application for Mac that allows me to save multiple servers' connection information in the handy sidebar so that I can quickly start remote desktop connections. CoRD lets me connect to multiple servers simultaneously while only taking up ...
by Todd Ritter on October 8, 2008 at 03:30 PM

Since practically every website requires some sort of user registration, I decided to purchase 1Password to manage all of my login credentials. 1Password is a Mac-only password manager that can also store secure notes, "wallet" information, and identity data. Rather than use a single password for all of the websites I access, or try to create a convoluted password algorithm to have a list of ...
by Todd Ritter on October 8, 2008 at 09:00 AM

As a blogger and IT professional I often need to make screenshots for things like showing a program window, instructing where to find an obscure setting, or making a witty LOLcat. Thankfully, Skitch is available to fill this need and make my screenshot tasks quick and painless. I didn't know about Skitch until it was released in public beta early this year. I downloaded the Mac-only client, ...
by Jason Clarke on October 7, 2008 at 09:00 AM

Recently our sister publication, TUAW, did a series of posts about each blogger's favorite iPhone and iPod Touch apps. We thought here at Download Squad that we'd take that same approach and apply it to our favourite Windows applications. This first post is my first of three in this vein that will cover Evernote, FeedDemon, and MindManager.
Evernote
It seems you can't go very far online these ...