Apple waited a full week before seeding the latest version of Mac OS X 10.5.3 (9d19) to developers on Friday. The latest version of Mac OS X Leopard adds 31 bug fixes to the growing list of issues addressed in the upcoming release.
Apple Seeds Mac OS X 10.5.3 (9d19) to Developers
April 11th, 2008 — General Computing
From Concentrate Software announces Paperclip 1.4 for Mac OS X Leopard
April 5th, 2008 — General Computing
Nashville, TN - From Concentrate Software is delighted to announce Paperclip 1.4, the latest version of their notes utility for Mac OS X Leopard. With a focus on ease-of-use, Paperclip is a simple yet powerful menu bar application that allows users to attach persistent, stickies-styled notes to their documents.
New social networking application for Mac users
April 4th, 2008 — General Computing
net4mac is a free social networking service built exclusively for Mac users. In order to become a part of the community and use all its features, users need to download an innovative application designed for Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard.
Steven Riggs updates TimeTable to Version 1.1
April 4th, 2008 — General Computing
Frankfort, Kentucky - Steven Riggs is proud to announce TimeTable 1.1, a major update to his time tracking and billing utility for Apple iCal. Why not use iCal for more than just scheduling? With TimeTable, users can view, analyze and total the hours recorded in their iCal calendars, offering an easy way to list the amount of hours scheduled. This makes it particularly suited for tracking and billing without keeping a second record outside of iCal.
Apple looking to put handwriting recognition into the iPhone?
March 29th, 2008 — General Computing, iPhone Hacks, Tips and Tricks
We know Apple’s had its Inkwell handwriting recognition software in OS X for years now, so we might have otherwise just totally glossed over this Handwriting Recognition Engineer job listing on Apple’s site. Except for the part that reads: “The recognition technology you create may extend beyond Mac OS X to other applications and the iPhone.” They always love to throw those little tidbits in there, don’t they?


