Posts Tagged ‘plugins’

MailFX: New Mail Notifier for Mail.app

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

MailFXIconMailFX is a new notification utility for Mail.app that displays a Quartz Composer animated graphic on the Desktop when new mail arrives.

This is the sort of thing that will please people looking for a notification utility between the complete pop-up MailAppetizer offers and the minimal approach of menubar utilities like MailUnreadStatusBar.

It installs itself as a classic bundle in your Mail Directory, with its own preference Pane in Mail.app’s Preferences:

Mailfx_prefs

Here you can select which of the included graphics you want it to display, how long it should display and how transparently. It can also play a sound when the notification is shown (Nostalgic readers should check out the Eudora new mail sound in the dropdown box).

You can also opt to reveal Mail.app when you click on the notification.

The plugin crates a rule that controls which emails will trigger a notification. By default it is set to trigger for all new mail:

Mail fx Rule

Obviously, tweaking the rule can reduce this and make the alerts more useful (for example, set the rule to trigger only on emails from your work account and not emails from your blog, or only from your boss, or whatever).

In addition, it claims to restore the ability to hide Mail.app on start-up, a feature broken in Leopard (and Tiger too, IIRC).

MailFX is freeware and only works with Leopard Mail. It’s available from the developer’s web site

Excursus: An Ethical Blogging Dilemma

Every now and then an app or plugin comes along that sharpens the difference between being a journalist and a blogger. The bouncy, bouncy notification madness of NotifX was just such an app. This one is another.

When you are a journalist, you just write what your editor tells you to, and don’t ask (too many) questions. And then you get a paycheck in the mail.

When you’re a blogger, it’s more complicated (for one thing, there are no paychecks).

On the one hand, you want to be comprehensive. That’s the point of the blog. On the other hand, there’s the question of good taste. The blog is “mine” in a way that the IT articles I once wrote are not. To be honest, this utility offends my aesthetic sensibilities. I would rather cut my heart out with a teaspoon than use it.

To post or not to post?

I resolve this dilemma as follows: Smack myself on the back of the head for being a snob, and post. notification, mail.app, apple mail, quartz composer, animation, anti-productivity applications, notifX, plugins, a question of good taste

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Flagit!: Customised flags for Mail.app

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Flagit IconEver felt that the red flag in Mail.app doesn’t offer you enough flexibility?

Flagit! is a plug-in that offers Mail.app users customisable flags of as many different colours as you like, as well as question and exclamation marks.

It is packaged as a plug-in for SIMBL , an Input Manager that allows application-specific hacks for Cocoa apps (like Mail.app).

It is not heavy on documentation. Pay close attention to the installer screen, because it offers you all the information you will get on how to use its new features:

Flagit Installscreen

Once installed, you can access its features through the “Mark” option in the contextual menu. Highlight the email you want to flag, Control-click (or right-click) on the email and choose the flag you want:

Flagit Contextualmenu

The Customize option opens a preference pane with room to edit the default flags and create as many new ones as you need:

Flagit Custom

It also provides the option to colourise the text of the email that you have flagged. Combined with the option to colourise the backgrounds of emails (which I do through Mail Act-on — Leopard users this way ), it can produce a riot of colour in your inbox.

If I wasn’t very happy about marking emails done or needing attention or waiting for a response with the keywords feature of MailTags , I could imagine using this, and benefitting from the additional visual help of coloured flags.

Flagit! works with Tiger and Leopard and is shareware (USD 8). You can download a 15-day free demo from the developer’s web site .

UPDATE: Users report in the comments that Flagit! doesn’t play nicely with the WideMail plugin. The comments also contain some tips on uninstalling Flagit! mail.app, apple mail, flags, productivity, hacks, simbl, plugins

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How plugins turned an Entourage Girl into a Mail.app Fan

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Pcand macHere’s a nice story.

Michelle Lentz, a US technology writer, has recently switched from PC to Mac. She was tempted to stick with Entourage for her email–”I want the familiarity of the Microsoft products”.

But she was brave. She transferred all her email over and was delighted by discoveries like Mail.app’s rules-based ability to change the background colour of emails. (“I actually couldn’t do this in Outlook.”)

But what really turned her head around was the wealth of plugins that allow Mail.app users to tweak and extend the app to meet their needs:

…I used a bunch of plug-ins to make it a more useful productivity tool for me. I was not happy with the way the ToDos worked, plus I wasn’t overly thrilled with how I had to manually file things. I remembered that a lot of these things I had fixed in Outlook as well using plug-ins. I was thrilled to find tons of Mail.app plug-ins.

She found – and loves – MailTags, MsgFiler, Mail.appetizer (recently updated for Leopard), MenuCalendarClock and (briefly) Letterbox , a fair number of the plugins in the Hawk Wings Top Ten Plugins list.

And the end result?

I’ve made Mail just as productive, if not moreso, than how I was running Outlook. This I can live with.

switching, productivity, mail.app, apple mail, leopard mail, entourage, outlook, plugins, rules, smart mailboxes

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HTTPMail updated for 10.5.3

Friday, June 20th, 2008

HttpmailThe Hotmail plugin HTTPMail has been updated to work with 10.5.3.

This plugin won’t work with all Hotmail accounts, only older ones. But in a clever move it tells you whether it works or not. Either it does, or it gives an error message saying that the account needs to be updated to Hotmail Plus (in which case, see Gmail )

From the FAQ and readme notes included in the disk image, it seems that there are currently two kinds of Hotmail accounts, pre-WebDAV ones (really old), WebDAV ones (less old). I think I read somewhere that 2004 is the magic date.

In any event, as Hawk Wings readers know, all Hotmail accounts will soon (but not as soon as 30 June) become DeltaSync accounts.

In the meantime, if your Hotmail account is old enough, this may be the solution for you.

I could only find an older version, 1.49, on the plugin’s sourceforge page . The most recent one is available from MacUpdate though.

[I should confess that I don't have a Hotmail account and--in breach of the usual Hawk Wings policy--haven't tested this for myself.]hotmail, microsoft, plugins, httpmail, mail.app, apple mail leopard mail, gmail

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Plugin List adds 122 Leopard Mail Templates

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

MailstationeryThe Hawk Wings plugin and add-on list contains over 140 plug-ins, add-ons, scripts and utilities to make working with Mail.app, iCal and Address Book smarter, faster and better.

Today it gains a new section for Leopard Mail templates.

I’ve managed to round up 122 templates, including the 111 contained in Equinux’s shareware bundle. The others are all freeware and are themed for Christmas, sober business use, New Year’s and the birth of a baby girl (oddly missing from Apple’s default list).

If I have missed any, let me know.

Of course you can always “roll your own” which is more satisfying. Tutorials abound. See The Apple Blog , The Graphic Mac and the tutorial and templates at Technosanity .

Equinuxstationeryexample 2

I’ve also added Eaglefiler to the section on Archiving.

The plug-in list itself is sadly in need of revision.

Some plug-ins have disappeared, the development of some like the notification utility iNotify has been stopped so that they are not compatible with Leopard and others have moved around due to web site changes. And there are many more new utilities that I still haven’t added.

I’ll work through it slowly. Promise. plugins, plug-ins, add-ons, mail.app, apple mail, ical, address book, html templates, leopard mail, applescript, productivity

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RelatedMail: The Semantic Web comes to Mail

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

SemanticwebRemember the “Semantic Web” (Wikipedia if not)? It sprang out of Tim Berners-Lee’s vision of a web that was smarter about sifting, analysing and relating the explosion of information fostered by the Internet. It sounds full of almost mystical promise (as Berners-Lee puts it):

I think maybe when you’ve got an overlay of scalable vector graphics – everything rippling and folding and looking misty – on Web 2.0 and access to a semantic Web integrated across a huge space of data, you’ll have access to an unbelievable data resource.

While we are waiting for this to arrive in all its fullness, Scott Ziegler is working on a nifty little plug-in for Mail.app that analyses the headers and body of emails in order to list emails related to any selected message.

It lists them in a pane on the side of Mail.app’s interface:

Relatedmail Pane

Messages are listed by relevance. Clicking on the subject line of each one opens the email in a new window. In the screenshot above you can see RelatedMail listing other emails I have received on the topic of the email highlighted in the Message List — converting paragraphs into bullet lists in Mail.app. It does a pretty good job.

Related mail does this by creating a database all of its own inside your Mail folder (which takes a bit of time and uses up a bit of disk space):

Relatedmail Mailfolder

The pane can be opened and closed by selecting its “Show/Hide Related Messages” option in Mail’s View menu.

Scott says upfront that the plugin is still in development and lists a series of known issues with the current build on his web site which also contains handy instructions on installing and removing the plugin and explains the colour-coding and formatting used in the pane to indicate various categories of relatedness.

It’s fun to play around with. It’s useful too. And it’s freeware (at the moment). Get it from Scott’s web site and get a small glimpse into the future of the Semantic Web. mail.app. apple mail, semantic web, related email, plugins, productivity, berners-lee

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MailBadger 0.3: Dock Icon Badge Bonanza

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

MailbadgerMailBadger is a nice little plug-in that offers the ability to create multiple counters on Mail.app’s Dock icon. Hawk Wings has covered it before.

It adds a pane to Mail’s Preferences with options to choose the colour, shape (standard “starburst”, heart, star or circle) and font of additional counters displaying the emails in particular accounts or folders:

mailbadger_prefs.jpg

Earlier this month, the developer updated it. The new version (0.3) is Leopard only (earlier versions still work in Tiger) and offers a number of enhancements. First, it provides a proper uninstaller, which will please people who are nervous about adding plugins and whatnot to Mail and not being able to get rid of them again.

Secondly, it now respects customised Mail.app icons. Earlier version reverted to the default icon when extra counters were added. Now it draws them on top on whatever icon you have in Mail’s application bundle — good news for tweakers like me.

Thirdly, it now offers options to count the unread, read or all messages in a particular account.

Unlike Dockstar and Docktopus, MailBadger is freeware. The developer’s site is down for renovation, but this link from MacUpdate worked for me.mail.app, apple mail, plugins, dock icon, badges, productivity

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