pgdahl
Peter Guldager Dahl
pgdahl

If it's on the front door, right in your face as you leave, you'll always remember to take it with you

It is a matter of argument; I don't know how small a footprint an app needs to have to be classified as lightweight. And: Lightweight is not the same as small size, is it? The fact that Sparrow is way faster and more responsive and feeling a lot less clunky than, say, Postbox, I'd say it's lightweight. Even if Sparrow

For Mac, I think it's worth mentioning MenuCalendarClock, which, despite its clumsy name, is a great alternative to CalendarBar. I think it's been featured on Lifehacker before.

I think it'd be vastly more interesting to know how you make a nice snack out of a clementine and some olive oil.

Things, Safari and Evernote. Cmd+Spacebar for the rest :)

No matter how you explain the functionality of the green button, it doesn't change the fact that its behavior is not consistent.

Also, clicking and holding an icon in the dock will show that application's open windows. The same as F10.

OS X: My biggest complaint has to be how the traffic lights (as I have dubbed the windows management buttons) are inconsistent. You never know what'll happen when you click on the buttons. Unlike traffic lights - and OS X in most other respects - they're not very intuitive.

I think this was pretty common practice in my grandparents' generation. Although, it occurs to me it didn't involve bothering to pour the coffee back in the saucer but rather drink it straight out of the saucer. Often with a sugar cube between the lips.

I used to use similar software when I was using Windows, because I always managed to clutter my desktop. But on a Mac, why clean up, when your system can clean it up for you? I use four Folder Commands that automatically sorts everything that I save to the desktop in four different folders on my desktop. It looks

It reminds me of a rather famous latin quote: Rem tene verba sequentur.

Yes. Except Sparrow for now only supports Gmail. But you can reply from any alias or account you have set up.

So, I click on the big, new Mac OS X button and I am taken to a post instructing me to set up file sharing between Windows and Ubuntu? The irony. I'd be amused if I weren't slightly annoyed.

Like the others who pointed it out, the title was confusing. I honestly thought this article would offer some rare insights in spotting a perfect egg. But obviously, you mean how to soft boil an egg perfectly.

I should probably hang a poster or something else interesting on the otherwise empty wall against which my monitors are currently resting before doing this.

I bought Postbox 1 for Windows a while back - and then again when I switched to Mac and Postbox came out in version 2.

The real question is: What to make out of the left over single chop stick?

The real question is: What to make out of the left over single chop stick?

I bought my first Mac (a mini that I use with two 21.5 inch LEDs, wireless keyboard and magic mouse) in October (and couldn't be happier about the switch). But the list of software that are mission critical to me remains more or less the same:

VOTE: CoTweet