Five Great Mac Bargains Under $30.00

Got 30 bucks* or so just burning a hole in your pocket (or PayPal account) and want to do something nice for your Mac? Here are some of great values.

HP Deskjet D1660 PrinterHP Deskjet D1660 Color Printer ($29.95 – MacConnection) - Great down and dirty printer. Up to legal size, does envelopes, labels, fair job on photos, not a bazillion ink cartridges to buy (just two .. the HP 60 B&W and Tri-Color modules). Not for high-end proofs or “keepsake” photos. Just a good everyday printer. Oh yea, Windows boxes can use it too. Update – 4/3/2011: Product has been discontinued. Check out theĀ HP Deskjet 1000 Printer. Same price. Similar specs.

SpamSieve ($29.95 – direct) – Apple Mail or Entourage Junk Mail filter not doing it for you? This is your solution to auto-detecting and handling of eMail nasties. Uses Bayesian spam filtering for great accuracy. Learns and adapts. Very few false positives. Especially helpful if you have a lot of different eMail accounts. Free Trial Available.

MacPilotMacPilot ($19.95 – direct) – If you didn’t know, many applications/processes have a number of hidden features you can tap into. Examples: change the login background image, lock your Dock, tons others. You can either learn the ins and outs of Terminal and then Google/Bing for the hidden goodies, or you can get MacPilot. MacPilot also has some powerful system customization tools such as broadband connectivity optimization, handling log files, remove unneeded foreign localizations (you don’t really need Mayan Languages, do you), and more. Although on these higher tech mods, you should really know what you are doing. But if you do, MacPilot makes it easy. Free Trial Available.

ASM (Application Switcher Menu)ASM ($9.50 – direct) – Long-time Mac users may remember Switcher, which among other things placed a system-wide menu to the right side of the menubar which listed all of your open applications, so you can quickly hide, quit, switch between them. Extremely convenient. Somewhere along the line, the Mac OS gained and lost again that capability. With ASM (Application Switcher Menu) you can get it back. Free Trial Available.

MacAlly iKeySlim USB 2.0 KeyboardMacAlly iKeySlim USB 2.0 Keyboard ($27.95 – from MacConnection) – Mistakenly get that “stubby keyboard” when you got your new Mac and don’t want to spend $50.00 for the Apple full-sized one? Or maybe your old keyboard has just gotten too darn grungy. Here’s a great replacement at a great price. It’s a Mac-specific keyboard (all the right Command keys, no funky Windows stuff) with two USB 2.0 ports, Volume and CD Eject Buttons. Great feel (I like a good old-fashioned “click”). IMHO, best bargain of the lot.

Happy shopping.

* Before any applicable taxes and shipping. Prices subject to change without notice.

RAM prices continue to slide

MacWorld is reporting that contract prices for the most commonly used DRAM (dynamic RAM) computer memory chips have dropped nearly 18 percent in the past two weeks. Memory prices have been hovering at all-time lows for the past year.

The article cites DRAMeXchange in explaining the decline is due DRAM makers building too many factories to compete against each other and on hopes people would take to Microsoft Windows Vista, which requires much more DRAM than Windows XP – which they haven’t.

Prices are anticipated to stay at low levels throughout the rest of the year.

You can get current prices for your particular Mac here …

So now’s a great time to buy.

Data Locker offers PIN-secure portable drives

Data Locker, Inc. of Shawnee, KS is now shipping three portable USB 2.0 drives, each protected by a customizable Personal Information Number (PIN). Available in 80 Gb ($149.95), 120 Gb ($249.99), and 250 Gb ($299.99) capacities, the 5400 rpm drives are protected by up to a 12-digit user-created PIN entered directly on the devices.

Each lightweight portable hard drive measures just 5 in. x 3 in. x 0.8 in and weighs less than 9 ounces.

The portable hard drives are plug-and-play for Mac OS X, Windows XP, and Windows Vista. No special software, drivers or installation is required.

All required power is drawn via the USB cable (no power bricks needed).

The USB 2.0 interface provides up to 256 Mbits/sec. of sustained Read/Write speeds – up to 480 Mbits/sec. in bursts.

All are available immediately.

Kensington updates input device drivers

Kensington today released updated drivers for its line of USB and wireless mice, trackballs, and keyboards. Kensington MouseWorks 2.9 adds support for new Kensington pointing devices and wireless desktop solutions. It also fixes problems with Bluetooth support under Mac OS X 10.4.3 and later.

MouseWorks for Mac OS X is a driver for Kensington input devices running under Mac OS X. It allows for enhanced acceleration, scrolling support, and configurability for Kensington’s current USB and ADB mice and trackballs, plus one-touch access to favorite web pages and applications using the DirectLaunch buttons on the Kensington Turbo Mouse Pro trackball.

The new version still contains only a subset of the features found in MouseWorks 5.7 that was used for Mac OS 8 and 9, however the company promises additional functionality will be added in future releases.

Product Requirements:
Mac OS X 10.1.5 or higher
Kensington USB or ADB mouse or trackball

Will not work with Kensington’s older products, such as:
One-button mice
Turbo Mouse 1.0-4.0 (the older, 2-button models)
Orbit 3D & Elite
ValuMouse products