Get rid of harmful browser cookies with Cookie Stumbler

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

When the Web was young, experts generally advised that browser cookies were harmless. That was before detailed user tracking across multiple sites and aggressive advertising targeting. You may appreciate the cookie that logs you into Amazon.com automatically, but you might be less eager to share your browsing habits with companies building detailed user profiles. Cookie Stumbler Standard (Mac App Store link for Cookie Stumbler Basic) finds browser cookies, including advertising and tracking ones, and gives you the option to delete them all, or inspect and banish them individually.

Like antivirus software, Cookie Stumbler combines an application with a subscription to regularly updated definition files. These definitions identify known advertising and tracking cookies, and delete them, based on your preferences. Cookie Stumbler currently supports ten browsers, including Safari, Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, iCab, and OmniWeb. It also scans Flash cookies set by Adobe Flash Player; flash cookies are not removed by a browser cleaning, even if Flash was invoked by a website.

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Gemini finds and removes your duplicate files

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

Unless you’re Cinderella and spring-cleaning is done with the help of some music and mice friends, it’s a pain to dig through your hard drive to dump duplicate files. Gemini (Mac App Store link) attempts to make this process a little bit easier—and, dare I say, a little bit more fun. Gemini will comb through anything you tell it to, spitting out snarky phrases to keep you from getting too bored during the wait.

Once those files have been scanned, the app morphs into an iTunes-esque interface, showing you just where your dupes are hiding. Gemini’s sniffer engine is pretty good, matching the content of the duplicate rather than the file name alone—if you’ve named the same picture with two different titles, for instance, the app will still tie them together as duplicates.

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Use Shapes to organize and design flow charts

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

Two recent projects (editing a 700-page website and designing a small iPad app) had me wishing for a simple yet sophisticated drawing program that would let me illustrate the relationships within clusters of pages (for the former), and the flow of the interface (for the latter). Had I known about Shapes 2.6 (Mac App Store link) in time, it might have been the solution for both.

Shapes lets you draw organizational and flow charts with a variety of shapes, lines, and arrows. It has a beautiful, elegant-looking interface that is supremely Mac-like, with a multi-faceted Inspector that lets you tweak line widths and styles, line and fill colors, text, and even fill a shape with an image. Basic grouping, alignment, and lock/unlock commands help keep things neat. You can export your documents in several different image formats (.jpg, .gif, .png, and .tiff), as well as PDF.

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Adjust file data and labels with A Better Finder Attributes 5

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

There are times when you may want to change certain Finder attributes on specific files, like the creation or modification dates. You may want to apply Finder labels to a number of files in folders and sub-folders without performing the operation for each group of files manually. Or you may want to lock or unlock files, or perhaps remove invisible files.

For photographers, settings to adjust EXIF timestamps, or match them to file creation dates, can be useful, so photos can be sorted in the Finder by the date they were shot, rather than the date they were imported. Web designers might want to adjust file creation dates as well, so they show up on a server correctly. And anyone who uses Finder labels may want to apply labels to a group of files or folders with a single click.

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Block apps from accessing the Internet with Radio Silence

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

It seems like just about every app on my Mac wants Internet access today, and sometimes I want more control over which apps have that instant access. Radio Silence is just the tool for the job. It’s a powerful yet easy to use firewall that lets users block applications from accessing the Internet.

It is perhaps the easiest firewall I’ve ever used. To silence, or block, an app like Spotify, for example, I opened Radio Silence and chose Spotify from my applications folder. That was the entire process. I then loaded Spotify and confirmed that Spotify was unable to access the Internet.

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Use TrackSift to tidy up your iTunes library

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

No matter how hard you try to keep your iTunes library tidy, sooner or later you’ll find cobwebs growing in its corners. TrackSift 1.2.2 (Mac App Store link) helps you take a broom and dustpan to the far reaches of your digital music collection.

For a set of iTunes-tweaking Perl scripts, TrackSift offers a handsome front end. Creator Doug Adams has given it a clean, pleasantly animated interface that occasionally gets crowded, but always presents its options clearly. The program takes a minute or so to scan your library the first time it opens, plus a few seconds on each subsequent launch, but the delay never proved tedious.

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Configure destinations for your files with Dropzone

Editor’s note: The following review is part of Macworld’s GemFest 2012 series. Every weekday from mid June through mid August, the Macworld staff will use the Mac Gems blog to briefly cover a favorite free or low-cost program. Visit the Mac Gems homepage for a list of past Mac Gems.

We all have tasks that we carry out repeatedly, which we know we could simplify if we had the time and inclination. Aptonic Limited's Dropzone (Mac App Store link) helps remove those obstacles for many jobs, letting you quickly perform custom actions on files that you drag into either its menubar icon or onto its pop-out Circles.

Dropzone's preference lets you configure destinations for your files (or for bits of text, URLs, and other sorts of data); by default, these actions are relatively simple ones, such as compressing the file into a zip archive and attaching it to an email, or moving the file to your Downloads folder. One clever action even lets you drag a disk image onto it, which lets Dropzone mount the image, copy the app to your Applications folder, and unmount the disk image and move it to your trash, all in a matter of seconds.

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