The first app that came to mind for free/lightweight editing was Bean:
http://www.bean-osx.com/Bean.html
I see it supports regex searches. But it's only for editing rich text. It would
be nice if someone out there has added regex to TextEdit.
--Andy
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:35 AM,
Hi Scot,
I did a little more reading about PyTivoX. The web pages mentioned pushing
and pulling files. I assume that pushing means that I would initiate a
mac-to-tivo transfer from the mac and that pulling means that I would
initiate a mac-to-tivo transfer from the tivo. Is that correct? I
Yes, mpeg-2 would be lower quality than the original AVCHD files, but Tivo
doesn't speak AVCHD, so I don't think there's a way around that.
As for the rest of your description, this is definitely different from how it
was set up last time I used it (there was no StreamBaby then). I can only
On Mar 30, 2011, at 7:06 AM, Lawrence Sica wrote:
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:55 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
The first app that came to mind for free/lightweight editing was Bean:
http://www.bean-osx.com/Bean.html
I see it supports regex searches. But it's only for editing rich text. It
would be
On Mar 30, 2011, at 12:36 PM, Michael J Wise mjw...@kapu.net wrote: On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:55 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
The first app that came to mind for free/lightweight editing was Bean:
http://www.bean-osx.com/Bean.html
I see it supports regex searches. But it's only for editing rich text.I
On 2011-03-30 08:06 , Lawrence Sica wrote:
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:55 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
The first app that came to mind for free/lightweight editing was Bean:
http://www.bean-osx.com/Bean.html
I see it supports regex searches. But it's only for editing rich text. It would
be nice if
Hi folks
what's the best upscaling media player for Mac? I have VLC, QuickTime
and mplayer installed, but willing to get another one.
With what software can I reenecode upscaled?
cheers Sven
(P.S. I have a 27 screen with a resolution of 2560x1440)
___
No one has ever been able to give me a convincing answer as to why EOF was
ditched in favor of CoreData. I can understand EOF, it feels
object-oriented and ObjC-like. CoreData is a like a plate of spaghetti to
my mind, very C++ like, syntaxy, and hard to get your head around ...
How about
Thought I'd supply a few answers to some of these questions. (See below.)
On Mar 30, 2011, at 3:45 PM, Michael_google gmail_Gersten wrote:
No one has ever been able to give me a convincing answer as to why EOF was
ditched in favor of CoreData. I can understand EOF, it feels
object-oriented
On 31 mars 11, at 02:34, Andy Lee wrote:
My question for the OP is: why does it matter that the same editor work with
both plain text and rich text?
Well, because I do use TextEdit to create prettified files a la Word sometimes.
Or I prefer to open a Word file in TextEdit just when I need
On 31 mars 11, at 02:34, Andy Lee wrote:
On Mar 30, 2011, at 12:36 PM, Michael J Wise mjw...@kapu.net wrote:
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:55 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
The first app that came to mind for free/lightweight editing was Bean:
http://wwwbean-osx.com/Bean.html
I see it supports regex searches.
On Mar 30, 2011, at 8:07 PM, Jean-Christophe Helary wrote:
On 31 mars 11, at 02:34, Andy Lee wrote:
My question for the OP is: why does it matter that the same editor work with
both plain text and rich text?
Well, because I do use TextEdit to create prettified files a la Word
On Mar 30, 2011, at 8:37 PM, Jean-Christophe Helary wrote:
I just checked the beta version and it can't open text files. It can export
to text though...
Ah, that explains why when I emailed from home I said it didn't support plain
text -- because I saw the same thing you did. The regular
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