- Microsoft
- Readers Like You!
- Fetch Softworks
- Web Crossing
- VMware
- Mark/Space, Inc.
- Bare Bones Software
Most Popular Articles
- Five iTunes 7.7.1 Bug Fixes Detailed (31 Jul 2008)
- MobileMe Mail and Gmail Go Down Simultaneously (11 Aug 2008)
- DNS Clients Have Small Vector of Risk after Patch (01 Aug 2008)
- Apple Finally Fixes DNS Flaw and ARDAgent Vulnerability (01 Aug 2008)
Recent TidBITS Talk Discussions
- Airport Extreme Disk Problem (1 message)
- iPhone Apps That Go Beyond Entertainment (7 messages)
- Odysseus, "Eudora style email client" (43 messages)
- Problems with Eudora on OSX 10.5 (Leopard)? (46 messages)
Published in TidBITS 733. Subscribe today to receive TidBITS in email every Monday.
- Dual-Processor, Liquid-Cooled Power Mac G5s Announced
- SyncDeK Synchronizes FileMaker Databases
- SpamSieve Coupon Reduces Effective Price of Ebook to $0
- Take Control of Upgrading to Panther in German
- Poll Redux: Your Preferred Email Client
- Join Us in the Mediterranean in November
- Two Portable Speakers for the iPod
- Entourage 2004: Important Incremental Changes
- Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/14-Jun-04
Web Information Systems Sponsoring TidBITS
Web Information Systems Sponsoring TidBITS -- I'm pleased to welcome our latest long-term sponsor, a small developer called Web Information Systems that has recently released the $25 application MindFortress for Mac OS X 10.3. On the face of it, MindFortress is a highly secure card-based database for personal information, much like Web Confidential or PasswordWallet, but when I looked more deeply, I realized that MindFortress goes well beyond acting as a secure digital wallet. That's because MindFortress lets you create your own card templates, so you can define what fields, and what field types, appear on the card. Also, because MindFortress allows unstructured text notes (with all the Cocoa text handling features like inline spell checking), you can use it as a general snippet keeper. It also supports importing graphics and movies, offers AppleScript support, provides automatic update checking, and more. MindFortress is an elegant application now, and Alexander Kac, its developer, has big plans for future releases that have me intrigued. If you're looking for a place to store all sorts of data, give MindFortress a look. We're happy to see Web Information Systems supporting the Macintosh community through their TidBITS sponsorship. [ACE]
<http://www.mindfortress.com/>
READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today!<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>
Special thanks this week to Karen Anderson, Lorenzo Kristov,
Harro de Jong, and Pat Curran for their generous support!






