
(Aggregated from Mac.AppStorm)
Every time I find an application that I really like, I immediately check out the other applications from the same developer. You’ll find that more often than not, there is a theme (visual or practical) that ties all their applications together in such a way that if you like one of them, you’ll probably like a few others as well.
Today we’ll take a look at some of my favorite Mac software developers. Some of them have created incredibly popular software while others are fairly obscure. You can be sure that all of the Mac and iPhone developers below ...

I recently decided to retire my self-hosted WordPress blog, and start blogging on a different platform. After deciding that it wasn't practical to try to import seven years worth of posts to the new platform, I decided that I would just retire the site, but leave it online so as not to break any incoming links.
For now, I'm going to leave it as-is, and continue to upgrade the WordPress installation with security updates as they come out. But ultimately I'd like to get the site to a static state where I could leave it alone and not think about it ...

High dynamic range or high definition photos have captured the interest of photographers in droves. It is only partially about how you shoot a photo and wholly integrated with how you process your shots. The processing of multiple images lets you bring out shadow and highlight detail to show more in your photo than one camera shot can capture.
Traditionally, to process HD photos, you take 3 or more shots of the same scene at different exposures using a tripod to steady the camera. HDRtist includes an easy to understand crash course in HDR photography in the Help file, which ...

As a Mac user, you're used to being treated great by your software. You love the apps your Mac shipped with, and you've heard of some amazing indie apps, and you're intrigued. But you have no idea where to begin.
This is where we come in. We've assembled a collection of some of the indie community's greatest apps, over $260 worth, and packaged it all together for you at an impulse price of just $19.95.
Enrich your software life, save a ton of money, help brighten the world, and make your Mac happy all in one fell swoop. Great apps, gigantic value, ...

When I first launched Notational Velocity, I knew I was going to use it for the foreseeable future. Let me give you a brief up on why. I use TextEdit to write most of my documents, and store them in my documents folder. It’s a fairly efficient method given the snappiness of TextEdit and the efficiency of Spotlight. I’ve tried document managers, and information repositories to write articles, but I always find myself going back to TextEdit.
But, as I mentioned in my review of Snippet, sometimes one needs to be shown a solution before one realises there’s a problem that ...

Skitch is awesome. I love it, and if it were a girl, I would want to take it out to dinner, impress it with fine wine choice and witty banter, and then encourage it to love me forever, and have my babies. I think if you get to know it, you’ll love it too, although maybe more platonically.Sharing’s caringChances are, if you collaborate in any sense, eventually you’re going to need to share a screen capture of your computer screen (or another kind of picture) with someone to illustrate a point. You may also want to draw attention to one particular ...