So, I bought the MacHeist nanoBundle. It’s reasonably priced.
I mostly bought it for CoverScout, Flow, and Tales of Monkey Island.
CoverScout is really cool, but I’m annoyed at the SongGenie integration thing… I don’t want to buy SongGenie. It should check if it’s installed and then decide whether or not to use it. It also installs SongGenie by default (then tells you you have to pay for it after a trail).
Other than that, it’s pretty awesome. It usually finds the cover I’m looking for instantly. If it’s not directly on Amazon or Google images, you can launch a web browser, search for the image, and set it by clicking “Apply” from the web browser. Pretty nifty. It’s better than my previous way of searching through iTunes for albums with no covers, then passing the song name to a dashboard widget which would search amazon and yeah… This ways a lot faster, nicer, and easier.
Flow is another FTP/SFTP/AmazonS3 client. It looks and feels awesome. I’ll admit that there are many similar clients out there, and many of them also boast the same features. One main feature Flow has that other don’t is an internal editor. Other’s (ForkLift, Fetch, etc.) allow you to open files in an external editor, but for some of the smaller edits, it’s sometimes useful not to have to launch a separate application.
How does Flow go beyond the competition? Pretty much just in the user interface. It’s beautiful. Transmit feels a bit outdated. Fetch is awesome, but there’s small things that irk me (mainly presentations of transfers, and I swear it’s not at fast, but it’s probably just me). Forklift is also good, but there are tiny visual elements to Forklift that offset me.
In all honesty, I already own Fetch and Forklift and probably would have never bought Flow if it weren’t for the nanoBundle. It’s beautiful, but it won’t cause me to go “Oh, I already own an FTP app, but Flow is just to beautiful not to buy.” But now I’m using Flow, mainly because I feel that a nice interface will increase my spirits helping to produce better results…
For those of you who don’t know me, “The Secret of Monkey Island” is about the only computer game I play. Tales of Monkey Island being on the nanoBundle sold me. That’s pretty much why I bought it. I don’t like spending more than $20 on a game, so a $20 bundle with a game I was itching to get had me sold.
No screenshot yet because I haven’t played it (downloading it now). I love the original game, and I’m hoping that Tales of Monkey Island is just as fun.
So there are a bunch of other apps you get as well. I can see myself using RipIt, but I don’t normally watch movies, so it may just sit there… MacJournal feels a little bulky. I’ve never been a fan of journal desktop clients, especially big and bulky ones… I might use Clips. Never really tried a clipboard manager or anything like that because it was never part of my workflow. RapidWeaver hasn’t been unlocked yet. I might use it, doubtable, but still possible. I’ve never been a fan of WYSIWYG or template editors, but recently I’ve been caught in a “quick make a page for _____” and would have preferred a faster method, but I’m currently looking at Flux for something like that (as it has more freedom than RapidWeaver). For everything else, I use Espresso or Textmate.
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