Re: Setup & development software for Macs?

2013-06-26 Thread Mark Struberg
probably the most important for me is mac ports. It's basically a BSD package manager with OSX packages. You can install all the *NIX stuff easily. There is also a graphical UI called Porticus. LieGrue, strub - Original Message - > From: Roger and Beth Whitcomb > To: dev@community.a

Re: Setup & development software for Macs?

2013-06-26 Thread Roger and Beth Whitcomb
As far as basic text editors, TextWrangler is probably the best: http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/ (and it's free). Also available via the App Store. Although the XCode editor is very nice as well. And I've used UltraEdit on a PC, and they now have a Mac version (cost is minimal

Re: Setup & development software for Macs?

2013-06-26 Thread Ted Dunning
I tested disk I/O before and after enabling FileVault and couldn't really tell the difference. I also turned it on after I had quite a bit of stuff on the disk and it didn't take all that long to convert (considerably less than all night). Leave the firewall on. It is very easy to poke and then

Re: Setup & development software for Macs?

2013-06-26 Thread Luciano Resende
On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 6:20 PM, Shane Curcuru wrote: > I just switched to a Mac for much of my stuff, and am wondering how other > committers organize their Macs and what kind of software they use. > > In particular, what's the best GUI-ish SVN clients? > > Your favorite basic text editors? I d

Setup & development software for Macs?

2013-06-26 Thread Shane Curcuru
I just switched to a Mac for much of my stuff, and am wondering how other committers organize their Macs and what kind of software they use. In particular, what's the best GUI-ish SVN clients? Your favorite basic text editors? I don't need a big IDE, just simple markdown/python/ruby, and occa