No, not hot as in very cool. Hot as in temperature. I’ll probably catch some *heat* for posting this here (haha).

John Gruber of Daring Fireball has a great article on Mac OS X and it’s user base. Great reading for the loyalists.
The Mac users of today are, by and large, the Mac users of 10 years ago. If you drew a Venn diagram with a circle representing Mac users circa 1996 and another circle representing Mac users circa 2006, the two circles would be about the same size and would significantly overlap.
Article here.
This article is by , originally published in TidBITS#834/19-Jun-06
Back when I first contacted TidBITS to write my article “From iPod to MacBook Pro: A Switcher’s Tale,” I never expected it would result in a trilogy dedicated to the state of virtualization on a Mac. But with this final chapter I’m proud to say my switch to a full-time Mac user is complete, ahead of schedule, and virtualization is far more powerful than I ever expected merely six months after the release of the first Intel Macs. And this isn’t due to the powers of giants like Microsoft (Virtual PC), EMC (VMWare), or even open source (QEMU), but rather a diminutive yet nimble startup called Parallels. (See my last article, “WinOnMac Smackdown: Dual-Boot versus Virtualization” for a more thorough explanation of virtualization and how it differs from Apple’s Boot Camp beta implementation.)
http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08455
http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08495
I’m normally quite cynical and critical of new technology products, but Parallels Desktop so far surpasses initial expectations that’s it’s hard to avoid waxing poetic. Although there’s still plenty of room for improvement, it’s one of the few pieces of software I can strongly recommend without reservations, and one that might just change the world’s perceptions of Macs. For anything short of gaming, Parallels Desktop is the best option for running Windows (and more) on a Mac.
http://www.parallels.com/en/products/desktop/
From Beta Program to Release—Parallels released their first beta of Parallels Desktop for Mac (called Parallels Workstation at the time) just as I was completing my previous article for TidBITS the first week of April. Unlike any of the other tools I tested or reviewed, including Apple’s Boot Camp, I was able to install any version of Windows, all updates, and all major software packages. Performance was decent, but the first beta was plagued with poor memory management, limited features (such as a lack of file exchange with the host system), and bugs that crashed my Mac during such uncommon tasks as putting it to sleep. That said, it ran Windows, it ran all the software I needed (including our corporate VPN), and ran it all faster than my PC at work. I’m pretty sure the Parallels development team hasn’t slept since the first beta, as the following two and a half months included nearly weekly releases full of significant performance and feature improvements. The final release is a polished, stable product with more features than the initial beta suggested, although still lacking a few pieces that advanced users familiar with VMWare might miss. Despite the “beta” label, I’ve run all the releases in my personal production environment and feel confident that I’ve stress-tested fairly thoroughly.
This article is by Sharon Zardetto Aker, originally published in TidBITS#831/29-May-06

The Mac OS X approach to fonts is something that can leave users baffled, and no wonder: many different types are supported, they can be stored in a multitude of places, and Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger installs some duplicate fonts as a default… and that’s just for starters.
In many months of font research for the recently published “Take Control of Fonts in Mac OS X” and its companion volume “Take Control of Font Problems in Mac OS X,” I trolled the Web and lurked on many message boards, intrepidly experimented on my own Macs, and served as the emergency contact for graphic designer friends (and their friends, and their friends’ friends). Of the many misunderstandings and management mistakes users make, one stands out as the most common: consolidating fonts into a single Fonts folder.
I don’t know exactly what motivates people to do this. (I’m not sure what motivates me to dig into the details of using the Mac - I just do, even when I’m not going to write about it.) But many users explore their systems, change things, and sometimes run into trouble. The Font Book application included with Tiger is such an improvement over its previous version that there’s seldom any need to deal directly with Fonts folders. (And graphics professionals who need more than Font Book use third-party font managers that protect them from needing to know about Fonts folders.) But perhaps a user adds a font and wants to get rid of what appear to be duplicates, or she comes from a Mac OS 9 background where it was more “normal” to manipulate font files manually. Whatever the reason, when you first start poking around on your drive looking for where fonts are stored (perhaps by doing a Spotlight search for folders named “Fonts”), you may be surprised to find at least three different folders, and perhaps four, from Tiger:
This little hack will let you change your desktop by lightly tapping the side of your laptop. No word yet on if this will work for my iBook, but I’ll definitely have to give it a try.
SubEthaEdit from CodingMonkeys is being offered up as BLOGZOT 2.0 on MacZOT.com. If your not familiar with how MacZot runs this:
What is BlogZOT?
BlogZOT! uses the power of blogs to create value for all Mac users. In today’s example: Each qualified blog entry reduces the price of SubEthaEdit from $30.00 to $0.00 by $0.05 per entry. For each entry, that’s $166+ given back to the Mac community.
BlogZOT instructions. Please READ them as we won’t have time to answer emails about BlogZOT until after it’s over.
They did this a few weeks ago with AppZapper, so I know it’s legit. So this basically means MacZOT and TheCodingMonkeys will be awarding $105,000 worth of Mac software. Viral marketing at it’s best!
I’ve read about SubEthaEdit for a while now and I’ve always been interested. Now that I’m starting up a FIRST LEGO League at my local elementary the extreme programming benefits may come in handy. (Imaging collaborative code writing with students using SubEthaEdit).
SubEthaEdit
This is a basically a collaborative coding tool, allowing you to write code in real-time with your wi-fi connected neighbors or internet peers. Can’t wait to try it out.
Jake, I can’t believe I beat you to this post. Anyways, this is pretty damn impressive. Check it out.
Japan’s Aozora Bank Ltd. is planning to do something once unheard of in the business world: switch nearly all of its 2,300 desktop personal computers to Apple Computer Inc.’s Macintosh computers.