Quinn: Bang-up Tetris for Mac

A screenshot of Quinn in action

I recently re-discovered a gem of an app for Mac that I believe to have downloaded several months ago called Quinn.

For as much as people tend to rag on Mac OS for its small selection of games, Quinn is, surprisingly, a free, bang-up rendition of Tetris (or the “popular falling-blocks game which, according to the Tetris Company, must not be named here,” according to the site). I can honestly say that its being a game aside, Quinn’s interface ranks as one of the best I’ve encountered on Mac. With its multi-player functionality, and ability to host games, I know that I’ve spent countless hours trying to top others’ scores as well as my own.

If you’re not a serious gamer, but are interested in a largely mindless and simple, classic game to occupy those few spare moments you might have in your day — which may be far too little time once you become as obsessed with it as I! — I highly recommend Quinn.

2 Comments

iTunes Album Art Bug

Quite a bug indeed — it won’t show any of my album art!

iTunes is unable to browse album covers on this computer

I’ve restarted iTunes several time, but to no avail. Perhaps a reboot is in order.

Anyone else had this happen to them? If so, how did you fix it?

Update: Looks like a reboot did the trick — problem resolved. Some other programs were acting kind of wonky, crashing when opened, but it seems as though the reboot fixed this, too. Strange while it lasted.

8 Comments

Ruby on Rails with OS X

Ruby on Rails logo

After putting it off for a while, I finally got Ruby on Rails running on OS X 10.4 (Tiger) the other night so that I could take a look at it. Crazily enough, I actually had an install from last May that I must have given up on. Luckily, all I had to do was update it with new Gems and everything was in working order… except for MySQL. Wow was that a headache.

In the end, after getting some very kind help from Jake, I found out that in my /usr/local directory were a number of failed MySQL installs that were preventing it from running. I simply cleared out every install, re-downloaded the latest MySQL binary and within minutes finally had my basic program from a tutorial, interestingly enough by Apple, up and running!

I played around and tinkered for a little while after this, and maybe it’s just my lack of understanding of the Model-View-Controller architecture, but it’s just not something I could see myself learning. In fact, as much as I get bashed for it, hell, I love coding basic webapps in Perl. When it comes to simply querying and inserting into a database, it gets the job done! :)

No Comments

My new favorite chat client

Up until a day or two ago, on OS X I had always used iChat as my AIM client until a friend of mine recommended something I had heard about but never tried: Adium.

Adium has now stolen my heart, with its highly customizable (and even more minimal-than-iChat) appearance, and exceptionally high tweak factor among other things. In addition to this, Adium is open source, with an extremely active development community. This means that tons of different styles, extras, and plugins are available; in fact there’s a dedicated web page for this because there’s such a large number of them. If you have a Mac, and use AIM (or nearly every other IM protocol), Adium is definitely worth checking out:

Website
Adium Extras

No Comments

Cocoa Firefox, FTW!

I’ll be perfectly honest with you. I really don’t like PCs. Yes, I’m a Mac guy. However, I didn’t used to be. Until a few months ago, my computer was a wheezing, 800 or so Mhz Dell laptop. It could do the basics ok–web browsing, email, word, things like that. But enough of my sob story. To cut to the chase, I had been wanting a far better computer for quite a while, and after having to put up with PCs and Windows for years the natural choice was to get a Mac. So, I got a lovely iMac named, um, Guido. Obviously, this new computer could and can do anything thrown at it (well, so long as it’s a universal app which is its Achilles heel, but that’s another blog post) but of course I still did not it for the basics, so for internet of course, I instantly downloaded Firefox, which was my favorite browser… for Windows. I instantly found it to be hardly as visually appealing as most other OS X apps, and it lacked some core OS X features (namely spell checking within textfields) as it doesn’t utilize Cocoa, an OS X API which lets applications have that visual aesthetic akin to OS X, you know–the flashing blue buttons and form items, things like that. Until now. Josh Aas, who seems to be a lead Firefox developer posted about this just-released Alpha in his blog. Note: This is experimental software, so use at your own risk.

That said, I downloaded it just a bit ago, and although for form elements it doesn’t render things as well, nor is at as sleek as Safari, but it makes Firefox that much more worth using on Macs. In any case, Safari’s my top pick for browsers on OS X, but hey, I’ll keep an open mind about Firefox and who knows, maybe Safari will soon be begging for my attention.

No Comments