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23 March 2008

Review: Marsedit 2 vs. ecto 3 Beta

The Quest for the Perfect Blogging Client on Mac

I’ve been searching for a desktop blogging client for approximately six months on my Macbook. I know many beginning bloggers just use the online editor found in their blogging software, but trust me on this one, using a desktop client will not only make you a better blogger, it will save you time, frustration, broken computer screens. Once you’ve found a desktop solution that works for you, you will never want to use your online editor again.

After I migrated from numerous Windows XP setups to one Macbook (no more syncing, yay) last August, it took awhile for basic tasks to become second nature. It was basically my first introduction to the Mac platform and while I can say (like everyone else) I would never go back, it was not love at first sight (more on that later, okay?).

It soon became obvious that there are only two options when it comes to desktop blogging on Mac.

  1. ecto256.png ecto, a project by Adriaan Tijsseling, a 30 something developer who works at Technorati Japan and develops ecto in his spare time. Don’t be fooled by the “beta” packaging on the rewritten 3.x trunk. In the words of Adriaan, this version is “very stable”.
  2. appicon_marsedit.pngMarsedit, a project originally developed by Newsgator, the same company that produced everyone’s favorite RSS reader, Netnewswire (now free). Marsedit was sold to Daniel Jalkut at Red Sweater Software on February 22, 2007. Jalkut, a talented programmer has made a good program better. Marsedit is currently in version 2.1.2.

Since both of these programs have free trial periods, I downloaded both and began testing. Here’s the results.

Interface

Obviously the two were very similar in regards to interface. Both had a main screen which listed blogs in the sidebar and displayed blog posts in an easy to read way. It was only minor differences that set them apart in interface.

marseditinterface.png
Of the two, Marsedit definitely behaved more like a native app. The icons were modern and professional, and overall the interface was snappy. The post editor was beautiful in its simplicity, with a only a few text fields; definitely the epitome of uncluttered. A sidebar was available (but not open by default) which displayed available categories and other post options. A few code aids were available from a drop down list (and keyboard shortcuts) which automatically inserted tags for “bold” or links. Think minimal here.

ectointerface.png
ecto, on the other hand, was anything but minimal. Its interface was also very pleasing, even though the icons seemed outdated and the interface was juiced up with a tacky blue color. The post editor also had a sidebar (open by default) to define categories and tags. Of course, one of the most notable differences between Marsedit and ecto was the presence of a WYSIWYG editor in ecto. The editor included formatting buttons within easy reach.

Edge: Marsedit

Features

The feature set is very similar as well. Both support a wide myriad of blogging platforms. There’s no silver bullet here. But let’s take a look.

marseditmedia2.png Marsedit is undistinguished by its features. Support for native tags (I only tested Wordpress tags) is there but unapparent. A preference change reveals a new text field where tags can be entered. As one begins typing, previous tags matching your input will pop up. It’s a simple but not brilliant way of doing things. I found I had to tweak quite a few things in the settings before things felt “just right”. For instance, Marsedit was perfectly okay with me publishing a post even though I had forgotten to set any tags or categories. A quick preference change prompted a reminder. Integration with Flickr was there and worked fine but was unastounding. I concluded that while Marsedit’s feature set is solid, it is not elaborate or even obvious. Most of it’s just there, and it works, but it’s not pretty all the time.

ectomedia.pngecto, on the other hand, is feature king. It not only includes features, it makes them easy to find and use, and most are working by default. The WYSIWYG editor works flawlessly for the most part (no, this is not your grandpa’s WYSIWYG editor that pumped out crappy code). When you switch from the code view to the rich text view, if there’s any code errors a dialogue will pop up that allows you to fix your tags or let the program do it automatically. The tags generated by the editor are clean and valid xhtml, a definite bonus. I never ever thought I’d use the WYSIWYG editor, but I find myself using it often (and the ability to switch between it and the code view at breakneck speeds is a definite bonus). The media plugin which allows easy insertion of iPhoto pictures, iTunes music or Quicktime movies is a killer feature for anyone that regularly posts media from those apps. ecto’s ability to easily edit and resize pictures is also one that is lacking in Marsedit. Everything that ecto does is graceful and works perfectly, whether it’s tags and categories, Flickr and Amazon integration, or viewing the word count and changing the page slug. Bottom line? There is nothing I did in Marsedit that I couldn’t do just as fast or faster in ecto. And that for me is huge.

Edge: ecto

Price

This one’s easy, and while it may not be a deciding factor for most people, it is still important. Marsedit costs $29.99 while a copy of ecto can be acquired for a mere $17.95. Why almost double the price for Marsedit? The difference is the developers––Jalkut is solely supported by the software he creates; Tijsseling develops ecto on the side.

What’s ten (or twelve) bucks though? The price difference won’t be a huge issue. Either price is very reasonable for the stellar performance of these apps.

Edge: ecto

Support

I found both developers to be friendly and responsive; a test email I sent was replied to within minutes by both. This speaks volumes about the high quality software we’re talking about here. And even though there must be stiff competition between the two in a not-too-big market, they remain on friendly terms with each other. When asked which app is better, Marsedit’s developer, Daniel Jalkut responded,

“I think the best thing to do is just to try them both and see which appeals to you more.”

ecto’s developer echoed him,

“That’s something for you to determine.”

Edge: Tie

Conclusion

In the end, I went with ecto, as it seemed to be better suited to my workflow and I liked it more. But the choice is yours. Both of these apps are high quality and will get the job done. And that is the most important thing after all, is it not?

19 March 2008

First Glance: Ecto 3 Beta vs Marsedit 2

I had been using Marsedit for nearly everything that goes up on all my blogs, including this one of course, and while I was really pleased with the minimalistic design and thoughtful touches throughout, I just downloaded ecto3 tonight.

While I haven’t actually used older versions of ecto, this version (although still technically in beta) is suberb. So how does it match up to Marsedit?

Full review coming soon, when I’ve put ecto through the paces. For now, check out the screenshot similarities.

Picture 1.png
ecto 3 Beta

Picture 2.png
Marsedit 2

11 March 2008

OSX 10.5 Leopard, 4 Months Later

Macworld | Editors’ Notes | Leopard, four months later

Leopard is the first version of Mac OS X that has been less stable than the previous one for me—to various degrees depending on the Mac. Up until Tiger (Mac OS X 10.4), each major new version—10.1, 10.2, 10.3, 10.4—has been considerably better than the one before it: fewer application crashes, less-frequent system freezes, and better memory management. But my Mac Pro has had more kernel panics in the past month than it had in a year and half under Tiger, and I experience, on all my Macs, application crashes a bit more regularly under 10.5 than I did under 10.4.

I’m still on Tiger and getting cold feet about upgrading to Leopard. SuperDuper works fine for me so Timemachine isn’t a big deal. Spaces is the only thing that might persuade me to switch. Still, the Macworld warnings are fascinating.

Shawn Blanc’s Review of the New MacBook Pro

Shawn Blanc: Pro-Portable: A Review of the New MacBook Pro

While I had the PowerBook it was a no-brainer that the Mac Pro would be home base. And even still, when I purchased the MacBook Pro I fully expected that it too would be my secondary computer, just as the PowerBook had been.

However, it quickly became obvious that the MacBook Pro should be the main computer. It just made sense…

A little late here, but Shawn Blanc has posted a great and honest review of his experience with the new Macbook Pro.

8 March 2008

What the iPhone SDK Means For the World

Ever since Macworld 2008, where Steve Jobs promised an SDK for the iPhone, have Mac developers been waiting with baited breath. This past week has been simply rejuvenating for the Apple world: an iPhone SDK for developers, the promise of the iPhone 2 (a firmware update to probably the world’s greatest 1.0 device), and an App store to sell iPhone apps.

I’m pumped. Apple’s approach to selling all iPhone apps in one place may not be the best for open source apps but it does mean many small developers won’t have to worry about marketing their creations.

I’d love to get my hands on the SDK…but I’m not that good with Apple code yet. And plus I’m crazy if I think I have time to play with it. Maybe I should get an iPhone first. Hmmm.

Update: 4 days after the SDK release, Apple reports over 100,000 downloads. Phenomenal.

5 March 2008

First look: Firefox 3 beta Mac

I’ve been using the latest nightly of Firefox for Mac for a few weeks now, on and off. Just downloaded the new nightly today (3.0b5pre), and to my shock was very happy to see that the Mac UI got updated even more. Check out the screenshot.

Picture 2.png

The Safari-like gray isn’t new, but the enlarged “back” button is. It looks disturbingly similar to the Flock browser’s “back” button. New also is an apparently redesigned “star” in the address bar used for adding bookmarks. It almost looks sexy (and trust me, Firefox and sexy never belonged in the same sentence before).

Looks like it’s getting there. Now for keychain support. Don’t let me down, Mr and Mrs closet Firefox geek squad team. Please squeeze it into this release.

14 November 2007

ModX CMS

Way to go Modx on recognition as Most Promising Open Source CMS 2007! It’s been a crazy, crazy ride we’ve had over the past two years but the future is bright indeed. With 0.9.6 easily the best and most stable ever and the scary prospect of an XPDO core with 0.9.7, I can say that Modx is my favorite CMS ever and definitely the way of the future. Any questions? ;)

16 July 2007

Is Buy.com covering Connect3D’s back?

I purchased a Connect 3D 2GB 2.0 USB Drive from Buy.com almost 6 months ago. January 25, 2007. The main reason I chose this one instead of any one of dozens of others was because of the $50 mail in rebate attached to it.

Upon receiving the rebate, I promptly filled it out and mailed it in (amazingly, I remembered).

On April 2, 2007 I received this reply from Connect3D:

Dear ART KAUFFMAN:

Thank you for your purchase of a Connect3D product. We have received
your Connect3D rebate and are processing your claim. Please allow 6-8 weeks
for processing. If you would like to check the status of your claim online, please refer
to www.rebate-zone.com/Connect3D. Your Claim ID is ########.
Again, thank you for your patronage.

This is an automatically generated email that is unable to accommodate replies.
Please be aware that you have not been added to an email list.

Connect3D Rebate Center
Customer Care

It has now been 15 weeks later. My online rebate claim status still reports “Received, Submission is being processed”. And, more telling, the main rebate page for Connect3D now reads:

(more…)

16 March 2007

Google is evil

I’ve always had this sense that anyone with this much power is evil. And even though there are well documented arguments (Google Watch, Gmail is too Creepy, and Scroogle) about the dubious tactics of Google, I’ve never done anything too crazy such as refusing to use Google products. I do use Yahoo for search, as I have found it to be more accurate.

About two years ago, the official Google blog announced a “solution” to blog spam in the form of a hyperlink attribute. Yahoo and MSN quickly gave their support in a measure that effectively disabled search-engine friendly backlinks in most blog comment sections.

Here’s the scoop in plain language. For example, if you create a basic link in html, it’ll look something like this:

<a href="http://www.artkauffman.com/">Art Kauffman</a>

On the other hand, with the Google attribute, the link will look something like this:

<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.artkauffman.com/">Art Kauffman</a>

This attribute will tell every single search engine that the website displaying the link most definitely does not endorse the link. As a result, they will not index the link as having been linked by that website. So how does this play into fighting spam?

Google claims that when this attribute is integrated into blog commenting systems, blog spammers will begin to lessen their blog spam because of the realization that that link will not help them in search engine rankings. By default, any comment that you submit on a Wordpress blog will be tagged with a “nofollow” link.

It’s time to fight back. We little bloggers have a hard enough time getting high SEO scores (if that is indeed our objective). Our communal approach to the Internet has led to an increasing number of blog results in search engines. How much more would our page rank be improved if every quality comment we left on someone else’s site counted as a backlink?

Spam control such as Askimet and Spam Karma 2 are a much better defense to blog spam from Wordpress blogs than an indiscriminate attribute. In lieu of all this, I’ve decided to use and promote the Wordpress plugin called DoFollow. It will strip all your comments of the “nofollow” attribute after a specified number of days, allowing Google and other search engines to index the backlink. Thanks Kimmo!

Unless you have some brilliant idea about why we should be using “nofollow”, then go ahead and do the blogging community a favor and install DoFollow on your blog. Any thoughts?

6 March 2007

Life and Linux

Today I installed Slackware 11.0 on my home computer as a dual-boot with Windows XP. It’s been two years or more since I first started messing with Linux, but I’ve never fully given Windows the boot. I haven’t even booted into Linux any time in the last six months.

Linux is open-source, inventive, creative, and free. It offers me freedom from a Microsoft domination and unfair economic practices. Yet, I sometimes feel threatened using Linux. The substantial speed increase and relevancy of the GUI feels good to me, yet I feel like I’m wondering in a foreign jungle. I don’t belong here. There’s scary things that are way bigger and better than ole’ XP. And all the Windows XP users scoff when I can’t get the latest games or stay up to date on the latest Microsoft [empire] news.

Scary how much this is paralleling my life.