NZBVortex 3.3.10 NZBVortex is a small, efficient, and powerful NZB client for OS X, optimized for performance and ease of use-a usenet client which really takes the pain out of usenet downloading the most efficient way.
Current Version: 1.0.3b3 Diiva is a specialized newsreader that works in conjunction with Diiva's $5.00/month image preview and categorization service. Simply speaking, Diiva is a proprietary client that works in conjunction with the company's proprietary servers to help Usenet picture junkies quickly preview and find the pictures they are looking for. Available only for Power Macs running Mac OS 8.0 and later, it's distributed as shareware and costs $35. Version 1.0.2 adds/changes the following:.
Much improved stability - numerous crashing bugs fixed. Improved compatibility with a wider range of news servers. Added the ability to reset the group access counts.
Fixed incompatibility with aggressive transparent proxy servers. Improved error reporting. Lots of smaller fixes. User Reviews 'Diiva is a nice program for weeding through the thousands of GIFs and JPEGs that are posted online daily, but it's not without its quirks and shortcomings. For $5.00 a month, you can subscribe to Diiva's preview server, which creates thumbnail previews of most of the files that are posted to the binary graphics newsgroups; Diiva then displays those previews on your screen. Frequently, however, many pics display 'Preview Not Available' instead of a thumbnail; just as frequently, the wrong thumbnail is displayed for some pictures.
Also, there is no ability to mark a picture, thread or newsgroup as being read; nor are crossposts marked as already read (or viewed). This leads to a lot of 'I've already seen these previews!' Still, Diiva is better than downloading hundreds or thousands of pictures and sifting through them to find something good. The previews let you download only the pictures whose thumbnail preview looks interesting. It's a good program that needs some work and feature additions/enhancements, particularly the ability to mark posts & groups as read (or in this case, viewed).' —Kevin Engler 'Diiva fills a great need for Mac users who download images from the usenet.
Instead of the laborious process of downloading an image at a time, and then having to delete the ones you don't want, Diiva gives preview images, so you only download what you want, or else you can tell it to download all images in all your favourite newsgroups, while you're having lunch, then delete the unwanted ones with a single click. It saves a huge amount of work for me.
It's so intuitive I only had to click it open and it set itself up, without any human configuration needed!' —Wilson Gilmore 'Buyer beware, this company does not reply to emails, the application does not work with my ISP and your credit card will be billed recurring monthly charges to get the alleged full feature set. Stick with your free newsreaders or Baker; this developer gives shareware a bad name.' —Thomas Patrick Dillon another review!
Shareware; $49 Current Version: 4.3 (December 27, 2006) Hogwasher is a multithreaded, online/offline email and Usenet news client that has become a favorite of many users in recent years. It features the following:. Online and offline operation.
Powerful filtering. Scheduled connections. 'Tree' thread display. Security settings. Batch binary posting. Automatic binary decoding (including yEnc). Multi-part post assembly.
Built-in image viewing. Support for multiple accounts.
Full email support. Address book Version 4.3 - the first new release in nearly two years - adds/changes the following:. Built as universal binary.
New Hogwasher icon and Dock icon badging. New Search. Command, for creating a persistent search set. New account setting for whether searches use the XPAT command. New account setting for how many connections to open automatically.
NZB file support. Fixed crash and error -1309 retrieving large number of headers. Fixed nil pointer error while downloading.
Fixed the Download folder reverting to the default location. Version 4.3 is a free upgrade to version 4.0 or later; registered users of versions prior to 4.0 may upgrade for $25. Shareware; $20 Current Version: 2.8.3 (December 16, 2009) From the Info-Mac abstract file: MacSOUP is an offline reader for news and mail (it can be used for news only, if you prefer Eudora or another email client for mail).
It works either with a Unix shell account (in conjunction with uqwk), or with a TCP/IP connection (MacTCP or Open Transport). Features: fetches only article headers in a first pass; lets you select which articles you actually want to download; true references-based threading, with a graphical display of the thread tree; kill file (with regular expressions); and multiple mailboxes with mail filters. Version 2.8.3 - the first release in over two (!) years - makes the following changes/enhancements:.
Worked around a possible crash on startup with certain kinds of Address Book corruption. With very large Address Books, typing in the address fields of an email editor window was very sluggish. The Services menu now works in Snow Leopard. MacSOUP's scripting dictionary can be opened again with the AppleScript editor in Leopard. Minor fixes. User Reviews 'MacSOUP is a remarkably useful and easy-to-use off-line mail reader.
It combines news and e-mail, has an intuitive interface and a very good address book, and is one of the few Mac programs to work with UQWK, so you don't need TCP - a shell connection will work. MacSOUP can be configured so it is not something you even have to think about.
The new version, 2.1, will work with TCP connections as well as UQWK mail packets, but requires Internet Config.' —David Zatz 'MacSOUP, shareware at $20, is simply the best off-line news and mail program available for the Mac. It allows me to use an off-line connection with a Waffle Bulletin Board, as well as my regular PPP connection.
Features are: easy to subscribe/unsubscribe to newsgroups, good kill files, multiple mail boxes, easy to use reply and followup commands, multiple configurations for different servers, accounts etc.need I go on?' —Chris Smith 'I use MacSOUP regularly as my news client application of choice. By retrieving the entire text of subscribed newsgroups in batch mode, the user can spend as much time offline in examining the content. The status of retrieval is shown in in a small window with a progress bar. After MacSOUP completes the retrieval of the textual data, the user can be notified via a system beep. Alternatively, an AppleScript can be initiated (such as one to disconnect a PPP session).
'While reading a news article, you are able to see a branching graphical representation of the current message thread (with symbolic representation of whether a given posting has been read or not). While examining the graphical thread, moving the cursor over a message yields the name of the author. Finally, a fairly flexible kill file option is included. 'The one area where MacSOUP could stand improvement is in its inability to UUdecode binaries (either single or multiple segment). At least one other news client, Nuntius, has this capability.' —Mike Oetting 'MacSOUP is great.
I don't waste online time, and its email with newsgroup reader package is the best. MacSOUP also has an article thread tree, which helps you keep track of a topic. This is a must-use program for the beginner Net user.' —Toby Kels 'I have been using MacSOUP for about 3 years now, first on dial-up and now with a permanent Internet connection.
Even though I don't 'need' an offline reader anymore, MacSOUP still does an amazing job; the killfile facility is as flexible as that on complex UNIX news clients, but remains very easy to use. Being able to fetch all articles from some groups and only headers from others (e.g., binary groups) makes browsing fast and comfortable. And with all the e-mail viruses these days, there's another reason to use a program which does NOT support message attachments.' —Graham Reed 'MacSOUP is rather lovely, especially the threading for offline news reading. Flaws: it insists on using Internet Config, which makes it difficult at best to have two different people (with different email addresses) to use it for news and mail reading, which is a shame. There's also no 'take address into addressbook' that I could find.' —Stuart Langridge 'I use this on an old Performa 200 (Classic II) and it runs very quickly.
The layout of the windows etc. Is fine on the small screen and it looks good even in monochrome. This is an ideal newsreader if you are a bit short on processor horsepower. The graphical thread indicator is excellent. The only minus points are that it doesn't handle attachments very well and it can't decode binaries automatically.
The ability to customise mail headings is a plus. —Paul Foster 'The best Shareware app I've ever used - in fact the only one I have paid for. I even use if my Email now as well, it does lack in attachment support, but I set the message limit to download and use Eudora then. Attachment support is promised for the next release. It's a breeze to send messages to multiple NG's or Email and post replies at the same time.
—Andy Hewitt 'Still the only program with an easily-navigable two-dimensional thread overview and the ability to fast-read tagged messages only - like 'trn' on Unix. Downside: No Carbon version, no ability to export a full.newsrc file.' —Matthias Urlichs another review! Open source; $0 Final Version: 1.7.13 (April 27, 2006) / 1.2.1 (December 3, 2002) Mozilla was the original name for Netscape Navigator, back when it was first being developed in 1994 by Marc Andreesen and his friends from the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA - the people who developed Mosaic, the world's first graphical web browser).
The name was supposed to imply a supercharged, 'Godzilla' version of Mosaic; Mozilla was forced to change its name to Netscape when the people at NCSA threatened to sue over trademark infringement. Behind the scenes, though, Netscape Navigator and Communicator have always been known as Mozilla; type 'about:mozilla' into the 'Location' field of any version of those browsers and you'll see evidence of that. In the early 21st century, with the 'Mosaic'-inspired name no longer an issue, Mozilla became the name of the upon which the Netscape series of browsers was based. Continuously developed by programmers around the world rather than by just a handful at a large corporation, it changed constantly, and improved all the time. Today, however, Mozilla is no longer under development, at least under the 'Mozilla' moniker. The primary components of Mozilla - its web browser and email/Usenet client - were broken off into separate, optimized development efforts, known respectively as. The combined application suite has, as of early 2006, been reincarnated as, which I will be adding to the Orchard soon.
Nonetheless, I include Mozilla here for historic purposes, since people will still find it useful and functional for some time, and it represents one of the only opportunities for users of 'Classic' Mac OS to access a more modern browser that is largely compatible with today's more advanced web standards. While Mozilla 1.7.13 was a minor update to Mozilla 1.7 that added some, version 1.7 made a huge number of feature and performance enhancements. The have the whole picture. Mozilla is fast (once it's loaded, which can still take a while) at rendering web pages. Mozilla is a breath of fresh air, and while the interface elements seem a little slow compared to other browsers, pages render remarkably quickly. This latest release is more than worthy of your daily use.
Two of my many criteria for determining a browser's usefulness are: 1) how long I keep it open for browsing before quitting out in frustration; and 2) how long it keeps itself open before crashing. Mozilla wins on both fronts. Download it and try it for yourself; I suspect you'll be pleasantly surprised. FYI: If you use OS X and like Mozilla - but don't like the way it looks - you should proceed, posthaste, to download the, which lets the browser breathe through a beautiful Aqua interface, just like all of your favorite OS X apps. Mozilla's just not complete without it. Mozilla 1.7 requires a Mac OS X later to run (version 1.2.1 was the last 'official' release for OS 9, although the has a ), and it comes with optionally-installable news, email, and IRC (yes, IRC; Mozilla includes an incomplete IRC client called 'Chatzilla' rather than AOL Instant Messenger) components. The mail and news clients are surprisingly well thought-out and pleasant to use, although I will probably always maintain that it is better to use separate, dedicated email and newsreading software rather than taking a 'swiss army knife' approach; the separate tools are still superior at what they do.
(Personal note: this is why I actually use for my regular browsing rather than the combined Mozilla suite.for email, I use Eudora.). Freeware Current Version: 3.1 / 3.4 / 3.5.2 (August 28, 2006) Since John Norstad releases the source code to the free NewsWatcher program for people to change, there are several variants of the program that add many features. MT-NewsWatcher is a multi-threaded version of NewsWatcher (hence the name) that brings a new level of usability to the NewsWatcher series.
Multithreading has almost become a necessity in these days of Usenet overload, and the version 3.x series further enhances MT-NW's implementation, with an intuitive interface and smooth operation that will get you reading news faster than just about any other newsreader. Yes, it still has speech recognition capabilities, but a host of new features in version 3.x are, perhaps, of far more interest to most users. A few highlights include:. Read news on multiple servers at the same time.
Set up several personalities for posting, with different reply addresses, headers and signatures. View images inline, right in the article window! Non-image binaries show up as file icons. Read and post articles in different languages, like Japanese and Chinese. Post binaries to newsgroups. Index the contents of articles that you read, so that you can search them later. Configure per-group preferences for list format, character sets etc.
Real-time pattern filtering in newsgroup, subject, and article windows. Newsgroup FAQ retrieval. Many other new features, and feature enhancements. Version 3.1 (the latest 'Classic' version) has some new features, and a lot of bug fixes.
New features include:. Progressive movie (QuickTime, MPEG etc) display, and MP3 playing. More image formats supported (PNG and other QuickTime image formats). Option to use a more accurate way of counting the number of articles available in a group.
More message posting options. Support for UTF-7 and UTF-8. SOCKS 4 support (via the Internet Control Panel). Version 3.4 (the latest Mac OS 9 version, which is not considered fully supported by the author) features the following changes:. Junk filtering - MT-NW now has an adaptive junk filter that makes it much easier to filter spam out of your newsgroups. Inline spell checking - The native Cocoa spell checker is used to do spell checking as you type in message windows, complete with red underline.
Email address auto-complete - The system Address Book is used to auto-complete email addresses as you type them in recipient fields. Better error reporting when extracting binaries - When batch-extracting binaries, extraction errors now go into a log window to avoid interrupting the extraction with dialogs. Auto-extracting of downloaded files - You can set preferences so that 'safe' files that you download are automatically opened. Version 3.5.2 (the latest Mac OS X version) is a must-have upgrade, bringing Universal Binary support for both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs. Improvements include:. Secure News - Added support for news over SSL (snews), configurable via the server settings in the News Servers dialog.
Secure Mail - Added support for SMTP authentication, and SMTP over TLS and SSL, configurable via the Mail Server tab in the Personalities dialog. Passwords Stored in Keychain - MT-NW can now store news and mail passwords in your Keychain, and not in its preferences file. Search Integration - The context menus in article and message windows now have items to search in Google, look up a word in Dictionary, and search using Spotlight (on Tiger). Spelling-related items are now also available in message window context menus. More reliable binary extraction - This version contains fixes for several bugs relating to binary extraction.
Extraced binaries will no longer produced corrupted files, and the process will use less memory. Added the ability to create filters via AppleScript. Removed the ability to base a personality on an Internet Config profile, since IC is deprecated in the OS. The 'User agent' header no longer contains 'Intel' on PowerPC machines. Build PPC with gcc 3.3 so that it's compatible with pre-10.3.9 systems.
Fixed the 'Print' menu item. Authentication via GSS (Kerberos) now works again.
Fixed SOCKS connection error on Intel. Fixed a bug that caused extracted binaries to be corrupted sometimes. Fixed a bug that caused files created by cancelled binary extraction tasks to not be deletable.
Improved error reporting when extracting binaries. You can now Copy from the binary extraction Log window. Fixed memory leaks when extracting binaries.
Now use long filenames when dragging msgs from subject window to Finder. JPEG images now display millions of colors, which fixes color banding issues.
Fixed some issues enabling menu items on the 'Shared Newsrc' submenu. Fixed a bug that caused some window positions to be restored incorrectly on Intel (this was most apparent with the Log window, and I believe was responsible for a nasty hang when extracting binaries on Intel machines).
Fixed an issue that caused MT-NW to complain that some URL helpers (like Fetch) are too old to use. MT-NewsWatcher is one of the reasons the Macintosh remains the preferred platform for serious Usenet junkies. There's little else that compares with it. User Reviews 'Multi-Threaded NewsWatcher. without doubt positions itself as the premier Usenet newsreader available today for the Macintosh.
Simon Fraser has done an unbelievable job supporting this excellent product, and get this - it's free! It is easily the most-used piece of software I have on my Mac. 'As far as bug fixes are concerned, every bug report I have sent to Simon has either resulted in a fix or has been acknowledged. Three new releases this year is pretty good going!
I work for a software development company, so I can appreciate the response Simon is providing. Another review! For Mac OS X 10.3.9+ is available (July 7, 2008), adding/fixing the following:. MT-NewsWatcher now supports SSL (secure) connections to news servers. To enable SSL for a server, go to the News Servers item on the Special menu. In the resulting dialog, select the server you wish to change.
Check the 'Use secure connection' checkbox under the server address. Normally this will use port 563, but you can change that if you wish. Some forms of SMTP authentication are now supported (PLAIN, LOGIN and CRAM-MD5). MT-NewsWatcher will attempt to detect which authentication methods your mail server supports, and use the most secure. Secure SMTP is not yet supported.
MT-NewsWatcher now stores passwords for news and mail in Keychain. This relaxes the maximum username length from 32 to 64 characters. MT-NewsWatcher is now Leopard-compatible. Improved typing performance by not flushing the graphics port on every caret blink.
Greyscale images now display correctly. Fixed authentication issues when not saving the password in Keychain.
Fixed the display of the help images on Intel machines. Fixed a hang on 10.5 when extracting binaries on showing a 'Choose folder' dialog (and some other related hangs). Fixed a hang on 10.5 after posting a message (deadlock when destroying the spell checker object). Fixed a bug that could cause security failure dialogs to not be displayed on connection.
(b2). Fixed a bug introduced in 3.5.3b1 that caused sending mail to never complete. (b2). No longer show error message when dragging and dropping in subject windows. (b2). Made uudecoding more robust to crud inserted into articles by news feed providers. (b2).
Fixed the ability to drag an inline image to the Finder without selecting it (option key saves a file, rather than a clipping). (b2). Moved the MT-NewsWatcher.rsrc file to the English.lproj directory in the package to make localization easier. (b2).
Fixed a crash closing subject windows after rebuilding the full groups list. (b3). Fix an issue where Extract Binaries would sometimes stall after choosing a destination folder. (b3). Clear the news server authentication password field when switching between news servers. Shareware; €14.99 Current Version: 0.2.9 (July 14, 2009) Nemo is Usenet newsreader made for Mac OS X that is designed to look and behave like an Apple application.
It uses the most recent Mac OS X technologies like. Nemo uses WebKit in order to render messages on screen. This means that if you know a little bit of CSS you can create your own messages styles or threads map styles easily and share them with other users like in Adium or Colloquy. You can also navigate the Internet with the simple and complete integrated browser; you can use your bookmarks from your favorite browser with an auto-update sync feature. Features include:. You can use it as an Online or Offline newsreader.
Google Groups Integration. Fast message search bar for Subject, Author, MsgID and Body. Advanced Search inside groups. X-Face, Face and X-Face-URL support. Messages rendering engine based on WebKit, fully customizable. Fully Customizable Signatures with AppleScript. Growl Notification supports for incoming events.
Hierarchical Messages List. Flat Messages List. Graphical Thread Map.
Navigate between threads using your keyboard without touching the mouse. Thread Inspector window to navigate without opening a thread. Smart Folder Support. Virtual Newsgroup to archive messages. Multiple Labels support. Mark a message as watched.
Automatic archive purge. Automatic groups refresh. Send a message automatically at specified time. Multiple Concurrent downloads from the same server. Customizable dock icon. Messages preview as tooltips in list.
Multiple post ordering (last thread update and thread creation). Support for different encodings from standard ISO to Japanese. Integrated web browser based upon WebKit engine. Automatically share bookmarks with Safari, Camino, Firefox, Opera and OmniWeb. Automatic Software Update.
Export or Import settings between different copies of Nemo. Spotlight support. Version 0.2.9 adds/changes the following:. #450 Can't send messages.
#432 Nemo places signature in one-line. #438 Can't perform refresh. #439 Can't select groups. #440 Subscribing to the same group is allowed multiple times. #441 Deleting drafts is dimmed. #442 Added shortcut to refresh selected groups and refresh all subscriptions.
#445 Crash at startup See the for more information. Freeware Current Version: 9.0.0.5 (December 11, 2007) Please note: As of February, 2008, Netscape will once again be discontinued. This time, however, it will be discontinued for all platforms, and support for all versions, past and present, will be discontinued as well. See for more information.
Once the universal choice for browsing the web, Netscape's presence today has been marginalized by many other browsers, largely due to the stagnant 4.x series that introduced little innovation, and to the 6.x series, which merely showed amateurish promise. Netscape 9 is a bundled Web browser / authoring environment / email / newsreader / instant messenger offering based upon the project's browser and renderer work. The primary components of Netscape and Mozilla - both the web browser and email/Usenet client - were broken off into separate, optimized development efforts, known respectively as. The combined application suite has, as of early 2006, been reincarnated as, which I will be adding to the Orchard soon. In its older (7.x) incarnations, Netscape represents one of the few remaining opportunities for users of 'Classic' Mac OS to access a more modern browser that is largely compatible with today's more advanced web standards.
Version 7.02 was the final release for 'Classic' Mac OS, and it remains available, below. Version 9 is available for Mac OS X 10.2 and later, represents the first new release of Netscape for the Mac in over three years.
It's a universal binary, and it offers the following:. Visual Refresh - Netscape Navigator 9's theme has been updated to save screen-space and leave more room for the websites you visit. URL Correction - Navigator 9 will automatically correct common typos in URLs. For example, if you accidentally type googlecom, Navigator will fix it be to google.com. The browser will watch for nearly 30 different types of common mistakes and correct them for you (asking you to confirm, if you choose to enable confirmation).
News Menu and Sidebar - The latest news is built right into the browser, under the News menu. Provided by Netscape.com, you can customize the menu to only contain the news sections you want to monitor.
You can also open the News sidebar to always keep an eye on what's happening. Link Pad - The Link Pad is a new sidebar feature that allows you to save links/URLs that you want to visit later without cluttering your bookmarks. Just drag a link over the Link Pad status bar icon and drop it to save it in the Link Pad. By default, clicking on an item in the Link Pad will open it in the browser and remove it from the list, saving you the step of deleting it. News Tracker - The Netscape Tracker sidebar lets you monitor breaking news as it happens, via Netscape.com. In-browser voting - Share your opinions with the world! The icons in the Navigator address bar let you share interesting stories you find and vote on stories shared by others.
Extension Compatibility - Navigator 9 shares an architecture with the latest Mozilla technologies; as such, Navigator 9 will let you install that are compatible with Firefox 2. Sidebar Mini Browser - You've always been able to have bookmarks open in the sidebar, but we've improved this functionality and extended it to all links, not just bookmarks.
Additionally, we've added a navigation toolbar to the sidebar for even easier split-screened browsing. Just right-click on a link and select 'Open Link in Sidebar' to get started!. Restart Netcape - A smalll but oft-requested feature: you can now restart Navigator (and keep your current tabs intact) by selecting 'Restart Navigator' from the File menu. Resizeable Textarea - Drag the bottom-right corners of text fields in forms to add more typing space.
Tab History - Opening a link in a new tab will give the new tab the same history as the source tab for a more seamless tabbed browsing experience. OPML Support - Netscape Navigator supports importing and exporting your bookmarks in OPML, a popular format for sharing lists of newsfeeds. Throbber - By popular demand, the Netscape 7-style throbber is back. Click on it any time to visit Netscape.com. Combined Stop/Reload button - To save space in your toolbar, we've combined the stop and reload buttons.
Because you never need both at the same time, the toolbar will only show the relevant half of the pair. Friends' Activity Sidebar - If you are a member at Netscape.com, you can keep tabs on what your friends find interesting. This sidebar lets you view your friends latest votes, comments, and story submissions. Sitemail Notification - This icon will sport an exclamation point when you have new Netscape.com sitemail messages waiting for you. Since Navigator 9 is based on the newest Mozilla technologies, there are additional features in Navigator 9 that were not available in Netscape Browser 8.x. You can read about those new features in.
Version 9.0.0.5 adds/changes the following:. included in Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.11 have been included in Netscape Navigator 9.0.0.5. Netscape 9 is as fast at loading and viewing/navigating pages than just about any browser available for the Mac - even though the interface elements are somewhat clunkier.
Even so, Netscape Communicator 4 (updated on 8/20/2002 to ) is still available (see below) for those who might prefer its quirks. I have chosen not to review the non-browser components of this release, but I generally recommend people use separate, dedicated email and newsreading software (although the email component has gotten rave reviews in many publications). The Swiss army knife approach just doesn't cut it for me (pun very much intended) when it's not a matter of my pockets feeling bulky. Current Version: alpha 12 Newsflash is a free Usenet newsreader featuring:. A user-friendly Aqua GUI. Multi-threaded (non-blocking) operation. Multiple NNTP server support.
True (by-reference) article threading. Multiple NNTP server support. As of June 2002, Newsflash is still in the early alpha stages of development. The current release may contain serious bugs, so use it at your own risk. Freeware Current Version: 10.0 (September 2, 2009) Opera, the browser that has been a favorite of PC users for years, has finally arrived on the Macintosh in recent years. Similar in scope to, Opera includes not just a web browser, but an email client and Usenet newsreader as well. Both of these are quite capable, and worth a look if you prefer an all-in-one application to suit the bulk of your Internet communication needs.
Version 10.0 makes the following enhancements from version 9.64:. Auto update - Opera now includes the ability to update itself automatically when new releases become available. By default, Opera will notify the user about available updates. Users can specify that snapshot build releases of Opera should be downloaded by enabling 'Download All Snapshots' in opera:config.
Users can also choose not to check for updates or to automatically install updates by going to Tools Preferences Advanced Security and changing the 'Opera update level' (select box) to the: 'Automatically install updates' setting. Crashlogging tool - An integrated user interface for built-in crash reporting has been added to Opera. This feature automatically appears when Opera has suffered a crash and enables a user to easily report the event directly back to Opera. Inline spell checker - Spelling errors are now indicated as you type via a dotted red underline in all places where you can input text: form fields, Opera Mail compose windows, Notes, Chat, etc. Only single-line text fields do not check spelling automatically.
The spelling checker can be enabled/disabled from the context menu (right-click a text field to open this menu). The context menu also includes spelling suggestions, the ability to change dictionary languages, and the ability to select additional dictionaries for automatic download and installation. Opera uses the Hunspell dictionary format, and a US English dictionary is included by default.
Opera Presto 2.2 rendering engine - The Opera Presto rendering engine has been updated to version 2.2 further enhancing its reputation for stability and security. Opera Turbo - This new Opera feature increases your internet bandwidth speed on slow connections using data and image compression technologies. Opera Turbo uses Opera proxy servers to compress the traffic before it reaches the Opera browser on the client computer. Pretty-printing of unstyled XML - Opera 10 incorporates 'pretty-print XML', which is now the default styling for unstyled XML and uses the unstyledxml.css style sheet in the Styles sub-directory of the Opera installation directory. Skin elements - New skin elements crafted by our acclaimed Web designer Jon Hicks have been applied to the Opera 10 user interface.
Visual tabs - The Opera 10 Tab Bar can be used to show all open tabs as thumbnails. Acid3 test = Opera 10 scores 100/100, pixel perfect on the Acid3 compliance test. Opera Dragonfly - Additions to Opera Dragonfly developer tools include HTTP header inspection, DOM editing, and automatic selection of the current tab.
Opera Mail - Delete After X Days - POP-only - Delete after X days automatically removes messages from POP servers after the specified number of days, which is particularly useful for users who have limited server space. This option can be enabled for POP accounts on the Incoming tab of the account settings dialog by checking 'Remove from server after #days' (7 days by default). It is also possible to specify that only read messages and/or only fully downloaded messages should be removed. Warning: Disabling the latter option is dangerous for those that use low-bandwidth mode, as messages that are not completely downloaded will be removed from the server, making it impossible to retrieve the complete message. Opera Mail - Rich Text Message Composition - HTML authoring. Regular expression engine - Opera 10 has an improved and faster regular expression engine that uses a stack-based bytecode instruction set.
This type of instruction set is based around a stack of values, where most instructions 'pop' input operands from the value stack, process them, and 'push' the result back onto the value stack. Some instructions simply push values onto the value stack, and others rearrange the values on the stack. This results in compact bytecode programs with code that is easily generated. It is a typical backtracking regular expression engine, but does some tricks to avoid redundant backtracking. These usually avoid the severe performance issues a backtracking regular expression engine can have on specific regular expressions. Speed Dial configuration options - You can now easily configure how many speed dials will fit comfortably on your Opera desktop. Click 'Configure Speed Dial' in the lower-right corner of the Speed Dial page to open the configuration dialog box.
Support for the CSS3 color:transparent value has been improved. Full RGBA and HSLA opacity support is now included for an easier way to make Web page features transparent. This is accomplished by the addition of a fourth argument to HSL and RGB, namely alpha transparency and results in RGBA and HSLA values. See this Opera reference.
Support has been added for the CSS Selectors API. This feature makes the selection of DOM elements a lot simpler. It includes partial support for namespace resolver features which allow you to work with mixed namespace documents and select elements based on their namespace; see this Opera reference. CSS files must now be served with the correct MIME type ('text/css') in Strict mode, or they will be ignored. HTML 5 algorithms have been implemented for detecting charsets in HTML. HTML 5 end-tag and start-tag parsing, whitespace parsing, and DOCTYPE parsing have been added.
HTML 5 elements can now export images to the JPEG format. HTML 5 transforms are applied when building a path, not when painting it. FPS (Frames Per Second) support: Opera enables you to manipulate the speed (frames per second) of your SVG animations using JavaScript by supporting the SVGElement.currentFps and SVGElement.targetFps properties. These properties respectively read and control SVG frames per second; see this Opera reference.
SVG fonts in HTML support: Use SVG font files to style your text using CSS (in both HTML and SVG files); see this Opera reference. Web fonts - font specification (@font-face CSS at-rules) with the font-family descriptor. Web fonts - src descriptor with local and remote.
Web fonts - TrueType (TTF). Web fonts - OpenType (OTF). Web fonts - Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) font support The have much more detail about these new features. I would daresay that, as of the 9.0 release, Opera has become a browser that is worthy of attention on the Mac once and for all. It's quite stable, capable and customizable, and it renders pages very well - on a par with Safari and Firefox. Its breakthrough feature remains its ability to magnify and reduce pages (graphics and all) to just about any size of your choice, which is a real boon for those with disabilities. Its RSS reader is much more thoroughly developed than that in Safari and Firefox as well.
Be sure to come back here again for more thorough review soon. Opera is entirely free, eschewing the built-in advertising that was once its hallmark. Competition in the browser space is a good thing for Mac users.
Let's hope that Opera can shake up the Mac browser world in a big way. User Reviews 9.0.1 'I've been using Opera 9.01 for just over an hour and I'm already certain there won't be a second hour of testing. In this short space of time I've found the delete button in the download prefs does nothing (I wanted to delete the application/zip prefs to force Opera to ask for new settings), when I set zip files to be opened after downloading, nothing happens, and Opera corrupted all the zip archives I was downloading from a sound clip site. Camino downloaded them fine. Something else that bugged me, yet wasn't an actual bug - when I went Opera-About Opera to get double-check the program version before posting this review, Opera opened the about page IN PLACE of the MacOrchard submit a review page:-( Not good behavior. Opera also touts itself as the fastest browser ever - not in my testing!
Camino and even Shiira are faster loading pages. These bugs and annoyances (and this is just what I've encountered in an hour. I wonder what I'd find if I stuck with Opera longer?) are nothing compared to how un-maclike the UI is. If only because Opera uses non-standard and un-maclike UI elements and practises, I will not continue using this program.' —Jamie Kahn Genet, August 12, 2006 another review!
Shareware; $40-$45 Current Version: X 1.2 (December 18, 2003) / PE 1.1b (June 12, 2006) / PE 1.2 (March 30, 2010) From the Info-Mac abstract file: PictureSnooper is an application that searches Usenet newsgroups for binary files, while you are having dinner, at the movies, or even sleeping. These binary files are usually pictures (and sometimes executables and HTML files). After finding a binary file, PictureSnooper downloads the file, decodes that file, and saves that file to the directory of your choice for later viewing. PictureSnooper X version 1.2 (Carbon, for Mac OS 8.5 - Mac OS X) made the the following changes:. Improved Performance On Message Parsing.
Fixed An Issue With Pre-G4 Processors. Various Bug Fixes PictureSnooper PE version 1.1b added 'Universal Binary' support for native performance on both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs running Mac OS X 10.4. PictureSnooper PE version 1.2 - the first new version in almost four (!) years - adds support for Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6. PictureSnooperX and PictureSnooperPE are shareware, $40 and $45, respectively. (Upgrades from previous versions are $5.). Commercial; $39.95 Current Version: 1.1.2 (March 9, 2010) Postbox is an interesting commercial email client and Usenet newsreader based on the email technology that underlies. However, it adds a refined user interface and provides advanced message analysis and cataloging functions that make it easier to search and retrieve information on demand.
It also includes some social networking features, such as direct integration with Twitter, FriendFeed, Facebook, and Flickr. Shareware; see text Current Version: 1.8.4 (May 31, 2009) Thoth is another world-class newsreader from Brian Clark, author of the awesome-but-discontinued newsreader. Open source; $0 Current Version: 3.1.1 (July 21, 2010) The point of Thunderbird - as with, the new standalone Mozilla web browser component - is to take real steps toward simplifying all the great stuff that comprises the project, allowing you to download what you need and nothing more. After 1.4 came out, new implementations of the two main Mozilla components (web browser and newsreader/email client) have been be offered as separate downloads. Is the standalone email and Usenet newsreader client, available for Mac OS X. Thunderbird is now a mauture, stable, and very capable email and usenet client, offering just about every major feature you might expect, from message and junk filtering to spell checking and beyond.
Part of Thunderbird's maturity is due to the fact that Thunderbird really isn't new; it's based upon the email client and newsreader that have been included in Mozilla for quite some time. However, Thunderbird benefits from the same streamlining and interface improvements that are making Firefox so desirable: by focusing solely on standalone mail, the development team can make some dents in the overall footprint and performance of the mail client by removing components and user interface elements that they don't need. On top of that, the UI becomes much cleaner in the standalone application as opposed to being part of the Mozilla suite. In addition to the feature set found in Mozilla Mail, Thunderbird has several new features and improvements to make your mail and new experience better. Highlights include:. The ability to the way you want them. Choose View / Toolbars / Customize inside any window.
can be added to Mozilla Thunderbird to customize your experience with specific features and enhancements that you need. Extensions allow you to add features particular to your needs such as. A new look and feel. Thunderbird also supports a large number of which alter the appearance of the client. An for mail compose which makes it easy and convient to add address book contacts to emails.
includes a FAQ, tips and tricks and other useful information. Simplified preferences UI and menus. Footprint and performance improvements. Apart from fixing a large number of bugs in the 2.0.x release, Thunderbird 3 made the following major enhancements:.
New Search with Advanced Filtering Tools - Search results now include advanced filtering tools. You have the option to filter your results by sender, tag, attachments, people, folder, and mailing list. You can also filter your email using the timeline tool. New Global Search Field with Autocomplete - When typing in the Global Search field, Thunderbird autocompletes against your address book. You have the option of searching everywhere or filtering against different parts of the email such as by subject or by sender. New Mail Account Setup Wizard - The new Mail Account Setup Wizard matches against a database of email settings from popular mail providers so that you will only need to provide your name, email, and password to set up new mail accounts. Redesigned Mail Toolbar - The Mail Toolbar is redesigned to include the new Global Search bar.
Buttons such as reply, forward, delete, junk are part of each email message. You can add those buttons back to the main toolbar by customizing the toolbar. Tabbed Email Messages - Double-clicking or hitting enter on a mail message will now open that message in a New Tab window. Middle-clicking on messages or folders will open them in a Tab in the background. When quitting Thunderbird, visible tabs will be saved and will be restored when you open Thunderbird the next time.
Nzbvortex Simply The Best Usenet Client For Mac Free
There is also a new Tab menu on the Tab toolbar to help you switch between Tabs. Smart Folders - The folder pane offers a Smart Folders mode which combines special mailboxes, like Inbox, from multiple accounts.
Smart Folders is now on by default. New Message Summary View - Selecting multiple messages will give you a summary view of the emails you have selected. Column Headings - The column headings that are displayed and the order in which they are displayed can now be set on a per-folder basis. Message Archive - You can now file messages from your Inbox or other folders into the new Archive folder system. Activity Manager - The Activity Manager records all the interactions between Thunderbird and your email provider in one place. New Add-ons Manager - The new Add-ons Manager (Tools Add-ons) can now be used to find, download, and install Thunderbird Add-ons which includes Extensions, Themes, and Plugins.
Note that few Add-ons are compatible with this beta at the time of release, as Add-on developers need to upgrade them. Improved Address Book - If someone is in your address book, it is indicated by a new star icon which you can click to edit contact details inline. If they are not in your address book, you can add them with one click of the icon. A new birthday field allows you to keep track of your friends' birthdays.
You can also add a photo for contacts in your address book. Improved Gmail Integration - Better recognition and integration of Gmail's special folders such as Sent and Trash including non-English versions of Gmail. Thunderbird also uses All Mail as the Archives folder. For Windows Vista users, Thunderbird 3 is now integrated with Vista search results. On first start, Thunderbird will prompt to install its indexing system into Windows Vista and you can choose to see Thunderbird email and news messages in Windows search results. For Mac users, Thunderbird 3 is now integrated with Spotlight, can import from Mail.app, read your OS X address book, and use Growl for new mail alerts. IMAP Folder Synchronization - Thunderbird will download IMAP messages by default in the background to allow for faster message loading and better offline operation.
This feature can be enabled on an individual folder basis via Folder properties, or for all folders in an account via Account Settings / 'Synchronize & Storage'. Version 3.1.1 provides additional enhancements:. Several fixes to improve stability and security. Several fixes to the user interface.
User Reviews 'After being totally frustrated with Eudora, Netscape, and the various of MicroShaft Outlook, I tried Thunderbird. This email client is the absolute fastest, cleanest, most stable email system I have ever used in my 15+ years online.
I use Thunderbird on my home system and on a business email system where it collects email from several different email addresses, all flawlessly. Outgoing mail is easy to compose, attachments just Work, and I have never had a complaint from anyone who has ever received and email generated from Thunderbird. This is the only/last email application you will ever need.' —Bill Shilling another review!
Shareware; $29 Current Version: 2.0.5 (March 23, 2010) Unison is an interesting new newsreader from Panic, the people who brought us the fantastic FTP client for Mac OS X. Unison offers a, threaded, 'Cocoa' user interface, as well as a few unique features, such as:. MP3 streaming. Image thumbnails. File grouping. Dock-based status.
A Download Manager Unison is, perhaps, the most 'progressive' and frequently-updated newsreader for the Macintosh, and it's particularly worth a look if you want a newsreader that feels similar, in many ways, to Apple's own Mail application. User Reviews 'Simply put, Unison makes the gathering of anything that is broken into parts much easier to decipher than anything else out there. I know.before. I download if a file will recombine into its whole state. Unison is a giant leap forward for large file downloaders and music enthusiasts.' —Ben Munson 'This is the first real native Mac OS X Cocoa Usenet newsreader for text.
Finally there is a smart dev. That knows there was no decent Usenet newsreader (text) for Mac OS X. OK, you can say there is Unison. Unison from Panic is good, but only for binaries; it has no multi server support, auto update of groups, etc, etc, etc.
The support from the dev. It's still beta, but it's very promising! —Wim De Smet another review! Donationware Current Version: 0.7.4 (June 26, 2009) Xnntp is a new (2008) newsreader written in Cocoa for Mac OS X. One of its distinguishing features from other newer Cocoa-based newsreaders is its, which should make long-time Mac users feel more comfortable than single-windowed newsreaders that appear to becoming more popular these days. Xnntp is under active development, so there are still a few features that the author is still working on:.
Administrative commands. SSL. X-Face.
Import/Export to mbox. QuickLook plugin for multimedia messages Version 0.7.4 adds/changes the following:. Now also stable on slow PPC.
QuickLook generator for preview. Quick navigation in threads. More predefined filters. CoreData optimized. Vertical scroll to expand threads. Growl integration. Key Mac Newsgroups There are several Usenet newsgroups dedicated to Macintosh-specific topics.
Here are the most essential ones: is a moderated newsgroup that contains important general announcements to the Macintosh community. Is the place to go when you have questions about specific Macintosh programs. Is the place to discuss all things involving Macintosh telecommunications and Macs on the Internet.
Is for all printer- and printing-related discussion. Is for discussion of all other Macintosh hardware-related questions. Is the place to go for MacOS-related discussions. Is the place to post when other Macintosh-related newsgroups don't fit the bill. Note: If you'd like to search the Usenet for Macintosh-related information, you really only have one option (but it's a good one): purchased the old DejaNews (Deja.com) Usenet archive, and now offers sophisticated searching of all mainstream Usenet newsgroups, both past and present.
NZBVortex is a small and efficient NZB usenet client for Mac OS X, optimized for performance and ease of use.
NZBVortex is a small, efficient, and powerful NZB client for OS X, optimized for performance and ease of use-a usenet client which really takes the pain out of usenet downloading the most efficient way.