Free Final Cut and Motion Plugins
March 31, 2007
CHV-electronics, software developer of plugins for Final Cut Pro and Final Cut Express announced today that three new plugin packages based on Apple’s new plugin technology “FxPlug” have been released. All FxPlug plugin packages from CHV-electronics are GPU-accelerated,
Wake up to iTunes
March 31, 2007
Awaken wakes you up to your iTunes music, or any of the built in alarm sounds. You can also fall asleep listening to your music with the built in sleep timer. Awaken by Embraceware costs just $8 yet still offers a wide range of features.
iPhoto Flickr Plugin
March 30, 2007
FlickrExport offers the ability to send your photos directly from iPhoto to your flickr account. Simply select the photos you want to add to flickr and use the “File Export” menu. The current version of FlickrExport for iPhoto is 2.0.6 as of 2006-03-16.
VisualHub now with TV Support
March 30, 2007
Techspansion’s VisualHub has been a runaway hit with Mac users of all types, from students to video professionals to families and everything in between. A week after the announcement of 640×480 H.264 capability on the iPod, VisualHub was
Knock Three Times : Belfast Exposed
March 30, 2007
Knock Three Times is a body of work that speaks about the demise of the working men’s club. It is a collection of photographs by Chris Coekin, made over 10 years, that describes the life and history of the Acomb Working Men’s Club in York. It is a personal exploration of the photographer’s own background,
FxGuide : Complete Guide to Rotoscoping
March 30, 2007
FxGuide have published a comprehensive guide on how to rotoscope. The guide looks at a number of different software applications and covers a brief history of the technique. Rotoscoping is the process of manually altering film or video footage one frame at a time. The frames can be painted on arbitrarily to create custom
Control your Mac with Bluetooth
March 30, 2007
Jesse David Hollington has created a series of Apple scripts that allow you to control your Mac using your mobile phone’s bluetooth signal. The tool Jesse chose for the purpose of the detection itself was a little free app appropriately called Proximity.



