Posts tagged with: SubEthaEdit


Oct 22

SubEthaEdit by TheCodingMonkeys has to be my favorite text editor on the Mac (which is one reason why I love Coda, because it has the Subetha Engine built right in). Not only is it a very nice, bloat-free text editor with powerful capabilities for syntax highlighting, etc., SubEthaEdit is the first and the best tool for multi-user document collaboration. Yep, even before Google Documents existed, SubEthaEdit was there. Although with Leopard coming out, which now has screen sharing capability built-into iChat, the specialness of an application like SEE may seem diminished, but it’s still going to be a great tool for those Mac users who don’t upgrade to Leopard right away.

SubEthaEdit 3.0 was released today, and it brings along some nice new features. Although the new version is completely compatible with Tiger, it also packs a number of Leopard features, including being fully Quick Look-compatible, making it possible to view SubEthaEdit documents in Finder Cover Flow, Quick Look, and share them in iChat Theater (albeit read-only). SEE 3.0 can also save files in a special “SubEthaEdit Text” format which retains data such as changes by different collaborators and who collaborated on what, etc. It also has a better view for tracking one’s connections, and a statistics window to view various stats on who has contributed what, etc.

They have a movie detailing all the new features in SubEthaEdit 3.0, although it’s a little hard to understand the guy, it’s still an interesting watch. My congrats to the TheCodingMonkeys and hats off for designing such excellent software.

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Aug 08

Coda is Panic’s new web development package for Mac OS X, and it recently won an Apple Design Award for a good reason: it’s functional, it’s Mac-like, and it’s beautiful. But when it premiered last April, it would take more than beautiful to convince me to change my web development workflow, particularly at the high price point (a Coda license will sell for $99, however there’s currently an introductory $20 discount, and registered Transmit owners get an additional $10 discount). However, Coda also delivered a web development environment that’s fully integrated and works well, and it has become my new standard piece of software. And I didn’t even have to wait for a MacHeist bundle or anything to be convinced to pay for it!
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