December 2, 2009

I can’t afford the DVR my cable company offers. Plain and simple. Even if I could afford it, I wouldn’t be willing to pay for it. It just costs too much money. As a busy student and TV addict, I would often have to choose between watching that new episode of my favorite TV show or studying and doing homework. Of course you can always watch the rerun, which usually shows during that next weekend, but I want to watch my shows when I want to watch them. Ted solves this problem for me. Ted is an automatic TV show downloader. Enter in your favorite TV shows and when that new episode airs, Ted starts searching the internet for a torrent of it. Ted will automatically download the torrent file and even pass it on to your bittorrent client. Here’s a quick overview of some of the features of Ted.
To use Ted, you need will to:
1.) Download Ted here for Windows, Linux, and Mac versions. (This link downloads version 0.971, go to http://www.ted.nu/ to see if there are newer versions)
2.) Have a bittorent client installed. If you don’t already have one, here are a few options:
I use both Transmission and Deluge. They are both great programs. I have never used Azureus or uTorrent, but I have heard good things about them. This is by no means a complete list of bittorent clients. You can use whatever client you prefer.
**If you want to automatically download TV shows, follow this guide to Ted and set your bittorrent client to always download to a specific directory.
Now, once you’ve downloaded and installed Ted, open up Ted and you should see:
The first thing to do is to edit the preferences. In Teds main window go to Extra (top left) then ‘Preferences’. Here you will see:
Here you can specify how often you search for episodes. I keep it at 60 minutes myself. Keep a note of the download directory, this is where Ted saves the .torrent files that will be loaded into your bittorrent client. If you have the ‘Open in default bittorrent client checked’ it should load the torrents automatically, but if it doesn’t, you can set most bittorrent clients to automatically import files in a specific directory. Just find that setting in your bittorrent client and set it for the same directory Ted downloads to.
The ‘Look and Feel’ tab at the top will show:
Here you can set whether Ted runs on startup or not, shows alerts, and allows logging. I definitely recommend you keep logging turned on because the logs may come in handy some time.
The ‘Advanced’ tab shows:
You can stop Ted from downloading certain file types; this is where you would want to put that information. Of course you can remove these standard ‘do not download’ file types, but I don’t like dealing with .zip or .rar so I keep them in there.
Click Save and return to Teds main window.
Now you need to add a show. Click ‘Add a show’.
The Add a show screen lists quite a few shows. Click one and on the right a tv.com summary will show up. Here you can choose to download starting with the next newest episode, the last episode that aired, or a custom episode. Once you’ve selected a show, click ‘Add’ in the bottom right. Don’t worry if your show isn’t on the list, just click ‘Add a custom show’ at the bottom and enter your show’s info.
Your show should now be in Teds main window (as you can see I’ve added the show Top Gear):
Now you will want to edit some of the preferences. Just select your show in the above window, right click and then click edit.
The General edit window will appear:
This is where you can edit the title of the show and which season and episode to look for next. If you were to select Season 1 episode 1 in the case of Top Gear, ted will try and find Season 1 episode 1, then try and find Season 1 episode 2 and so on. If an episode is not found by Ted, however, it will not move to the next episode until that episode is found. So if it can’t find episode 2, it will not continue to episode 3 until it has found episode 2 (unless you go to this screen and manually tell it to search for episode 3).
To add feeds, click the ‘Feeds’ at the top. You will see a window like this:
As you can see Ted has already populated 2 feeds for Top Gear. Unfortunately, mininova no longer offers TV shows, so you can remove that feed. Just click it and then click the minus sign at the bottom.
To add a feed, click the plus sign at the bottom:
You can choose from any of these and have it automatically add the feed for your particular show. I recommend putting in as many feeds as you can. There is no limit, and Ted will just download from the first one it can. Click ‘user defined’ to add a feed from a torrent site not shown in this list.
Now click Filters:
Here you can edit the minimum and maximum size of the video file. Any show that’s runs for 30 mins will usually be around the 300mb size, so choose a minimum of 150mb and a maximum of 500mb. Any show that runs for an hour, could be around 300-800 mb, so choose the minimum to be around 250mb and the maximum to be around 1000mb. If you specifically want HD content, click ‘Download in HD quality’ at the bottom and significantly increase my recommended minimum and maximum sizes.
I would recommend you use the following snippet of code in the Keywords block to stop Ted from downloading unrelated or private torrents:
(!(www | lol | com | net | org | cx | cc | leech | torrent | nova | bay | bit))
If you click Schedule at the top, you will see:
Don’t forget to click ‘Save’.
Once you have a few shows listed in Ted, on Teds main window, click edit and then click ‘Edit all shows…’
Here you can edit values for all of your shows at once.
You should now be setup to automatically download your favorite TV shows.
July 28, 2008
Ever since iTunes allowed the cover flow option in iTunes I’ve wanted an easy way of getting all of my album art together. Luckily I found this program for Mac users.
Fetch Art is a little utility program that does what the name implies: fetch your album art. It essentially uses Amazons XML interface to find the album art to match the info already in your iTunes library. The program is controlled through the iTunes script menu. It allows you to preview album art it finds so that you can make sure it’s the correct picture. Here’s a little screenshot:

thanks to Macupdate.com for the picture
July 21, 2008
Have you ever been reading an email or surfing the net and come across a word you wanted to lookup, but didn’t because it takes too much time? Even with Dictionary widgets and websites like Dictionary.com it still takes too long to have to copy and paste the word or wait on the internet.
So, I have the solution for you Mac users out there. This quick little tip will allow you to lookup the definition of any word in any Mac native program (Coco). The best part is the Dictionary application does NOT need to be open or even running in the background.
All you need to do is hold down Control+Command+D with your mouse hovering over the word you wish to lookup. You can even continue to hold down the keyboard shortcut and move the mouse from one word to another. The dictionary description will automatically update for each word.

If you are not sure what programs this will work with, here is a small list: Safari, Mail, TextEdit, Text Wrangler, Comic Life, iWeb and some other native Mac programs.
However, this shortcut will NOT work with programs that are not written in Coco. So even your favorite programs like Firefox, Thunderbird, Opera, Camino and Flock wont work with this shortcut.
July 14, 2008
Are you a college student like me who has a different schedule every day?
While I’m usually pretty good about setting my alarm clock for the right time, it doesn’t hurt to have a backup plan. I have come across a nice piece of software every student Mac owner should have.
Aurora is an alarm clock that runs on your Mac. It even integrates with iTunes on your Mac. You can set an alarm that goes off at a different time for every day if you want.
Want to sleep in on the weekend, but afraid you might forget to set your alarm for that 8am class on Monday? Aurora solves that problem. But what if your Mac is asleep? Or the volume is muted? Aurora will wake your computer and even unmute it if it has to.
Aurora even has a fade in option to ease you out of that deep sleep if you’re into that sort of thing.
Thanks to versiontracker.com for the images.
The newest version of Aurora costs 15 EUR at the project’s homepage. Of course there is a 14 day trial period before you have to buy a license. There is even a 20% (3 EUR) student discount.
However, if you would like to try an older version of Aurora for free, here is the download link.
June 30, 2008
Why on earth would you want to invert your colors on your Mac? Well, what if you’re on an airplane, it’s a night flight and you’re looking at something that has a lot of white space. You might be able to decrease the brightness on your screen, but sometimes that may not even work. If that’s the case, you can essentially make a negative of your screen. Here’s how to do it:
Just press Ctrl-Option-Cmd-8 on your keyboard. This will change it back as well.
Here’s what my home page usually looks like:
This is it’s negative:


















