Saturday, 16 December 2006

Five blogging a I'm thankful for

We are a thankful bunch around < an cla ="ca ">TUAW today, in honor of Thanksgiving here in the states. Since I end most of my waking hours blogging I thought I would give some praise to the five a licatio that make blogging a breeze on the Mac. This is not meant to be a 'Top Five blogging tools post,' if you're looking for something like that, check out Gle Wolsey's post on ProBlogger (though I have some problems with his post that I won't go into at this moment).

Read on to get the ski y on the five blogging a licatio I am most thankful for this holiday season.


NetNewsWire: Without a doubt the a lication that gets the most use on my Macs is NetNewsWire. At the moment I am rocking 673 feeds and no other newsreader can handle them all in the ma er that I like. I've tried NewsFire, Vie a, Safari < an cla ="ca ">R , and Bloglines. NetNewsWire takes whatever feed I throw at it and asks for me. It is organized well and thanks to the syncing via NewsGator all my feeds are the same acro my multiple Macs.

Optimized FireFox: Blogging and browsing the web go hand and hand. If NetNewsWire is that most used a on my Mac then FireFox is a close second. But I don't use any old version of FireFox. No, no. I use the optimized recompile that Neil Lee puts together. Thanks, Neil!

MarsEdit: Another Ranchero a in this list?! Yep. MarsEdit is a simple, straightforward blogging client. You can upload pictures, a ign categories and blog using a number of different < an cla ="ca ">HTML rendering optio (including my favorite, Textile).

Ecto: What's this? Another blogging client? That's right, that's just how much I blog. If MarsEdit is a streamlined blogging tool than Ecto has everything and the kitchen sink (plus there is a Windows version). Ecto has a few nice touches like Amazon.com searching (so you can easily blog about anything they sell), iTunes integration, permalinks are available within the a lication itself (which I hope is a feature MarsEdit copies at some point).

TextMate: I don't want to continue the 'Text editor holy wars,' but TextMate works well for me. Bundles make TextMate a Swi Army Knife of text editing. Projects let me keep a number of documents in on file, and the UI doe 't get in my way. I composed this very post in TextMate. What more do I need to say?

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