On 27 June 2013 03:20, Shane Curcuru <a...@shanecurcuru.org> wrote:
> I just switched to a Mac for much of my stuff, and am wondering how other
> committers organize their Macs and what kind of software they use.

Install xcode and the commandline tools that come with it (look in
preferences).

I use homebrew http://brew.sh/ in preference to macports.

apple's term is good, but I like http://www.iterm2.com/ better.

> In particular, what's the best GUI-ish SVN clients?

http://www.sourcetreeapp.com/ is free if you give atlassian an email address.

> Your favorite basic text editors?  I don't need a big IDE, just simple
> markdown/python/ruby, and occasional web page editing.

http://mouapp.com/ is a super-simple markdown editor that imho gets
things right.

bikesheds galore :-). I spend 80% of my day in komodo ide (but the
free komodo edit is very nice too), 20% vi, occasionally sublime text,
but I never really liked it. Aquamacs is nice for people who drank the
kool-aid.

> Also, a silly question, I know, but if I have my work on SSD, is there any
> reason that I should *not* configure FileVault?  It seems like a no brainer
> for any laptop.  Similarly, any reason to turn off the built-in Firewall?


Other stuff I use:

## passwords

http://www.keepassx.org/  there are fancier tools but it's opensource
https://github.com/keepassx/keepassx

## communicating

skype but I would love a SIP-based OSS alternative

IRC: textual http://www.codeux.com/textual/  is nice, BSD licenced,
but you can buy a built copy from app store.
        http://limechat.net/mac/ is another popular option.

## apps

vlc http://www.videolan.org/vlc/index.html for watching videos.

firefox nightly + chrome canary for web dev.

If you sign up for the free microsoft MSDN deal that ASF gets, you can
install excel/word/powerpoint etc if you need them.

Amazon's free Kindle.app for reading books (lots of gutenberg project
ones & similar free stories in mobi format)
calibre http://calibre-ebook.com/ for managing all my ebooks (on an
aging Kindle DX).

fluid.app turns browser windows into separate "apps" http://fluidapp.com/

vmware fusion + vagrant & ansible for spinning up instances everywhere
and configuring them.

## storage

MacZFS http://code.google.com/p/maczfs/ is pretty good, albeit an old
version. once I got past 4GiB of RAM I've had no trouble. SSD with zfs
compression is nifty, I have it on a 2nd internal drive.

I use openafs instead of dropbox.

backup: arq http://www.haystacksoftware.com/arq/ I used backblaze and
time machine for backups, but I prefer controlling my own storage.

github & bitbucket for really important stuff.

## productivity

launchers - http://www.alfredapp.com/
      others swear by http://qsapp.com/ quicksilver, the latter is
free https://github.com/quicksilver/Quicksilver and ALv2 licenced.

pomodoro app is great, https://github.com/ugol/pomodoro BSD licenced
but you can buy from app store

http://www.pomodoroapp.com/help/pomodoro-timer-for-mac/ is a more
GTD-heavy app, with a free option.

A+
Dave

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