

Fluid… Give your favorite webapps a home on your Mac OS X Desktop.
Are you a Gmail, Facebook, Campfire or Insert_Your_Favorite_Webapp_Here fanatic? Do you have 20 or more browser tabs open at all times? Are you tired of some random site crashing your browser and causing you to loose your (say) Google Docs data in another tab?
If so, Site Specific Browsers (SSBs) provide a great solution for your webapp woes. Using Fluid, you can create SSBs to run each of your favorite webapps as a separate desktop application. Fluid gives any webapp a home on your Mac OS X desktop including Dock icon, menu bar, and logical separation from your other web browsing activity.
How does it work? Fluid itself is a very small application. When launched, Fluid displays a small window where you specify the URL of a webapp you’d like to run in a Site Specific Browser. Then provide a name, click ‘Create’ and you’ll be prompted to launch the new native Mac app you’ve just created.
Use Fluid to run YouTube, GTalk, Flickr, Basecamp, Delicious, .Mac webmail, or any other webapp as a separate desktop application.
Anytime you click a link to another site in an SSB, the link is opened in your system default web browser, keeping your SSB dedicated to the original site you’ve specified.
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Scheduler is a utility that allows you to schedule reminders, application and AppleScript applets launches and the automatic download of web pages or files using your favorite web browser.
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iLoveMyApps lets you quickly and easily create and share lists of your favorite Mac applications.
• Import a single application, all of your running applications or all applications installed on your computer.
• Annotate, categorize and rank your favorite applications.
• Export directly to customizable HTML
You can also generate icon catalog images containing the icons of all of your favorite applications.
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Covers allows you to search and print CD or DVD covers for your own library of downloaded movies. It connects to your choice of three servers to find the the cover picture. Then you save it to your desktop and drag the image onto Covers for printing.
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zxsp is a simulator for the historic Sinclair ZX home computer families. Main supported platform is Mac OS X. Versions for classic MacOS and old versions of Mac OS X are still available from the zxsp download page.
zxsp supports “.sna” and “.z80″ snapshot files, “.tap”, “.tzx”, “.pzx”, “.80″, “.81″, “.o”, “.p” tape files, excellent sound, precise screen and border effects, joysticks, mouse, a virtual tape recorder and virtual keyboards.
zxsp can load from and save to a built-in virtual tape recorder or a real-world cassette recorder or a real-world Specci. It also can dup real-world cassette tapes to “.tap” files or vice versa.
zxsp supports the black&white models ZX80 and ZX81 and the Jupiter Ace, the ZX Spectrum models with 16K and 48K ram, the +128, +2 and the +2A/+2B; including the Spanish and French versions. If you still own one of the emulated machines and find that the simulation does not match the original, you are welcome to contact me for further improvement. Just keep the original thing ready for tests. 
zxsp comes with a debugger with register edit for the main chips, a video beam position indicator, single stepper and memory disassembly. The machine can be throttled down to 1 Hz or overdrived to 20 MHz cpu clock. You can directly load Z80 assembler sources into zxsp.
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