Growl: A Better Alert System for Your Mac
TMO Quick Tip - Growl: A Better Alert System for Your Mac
by , 7:30 AM EST, December 13th, 2006
There are so many things your Mac wants to tell you - if only you would let it. With a little help from Growl, you can free your Mac's inner voice and let it keep you appraised of all kinds of interesting things it is up to.
Growl works by intercepting application notifications. Whenever it picks up a notification, it quickly displays the information for you. Applications need to be Growl-aware for this to work, but for applications like Mail that aren't, other developers have stepped in and crafted plug-ins that send Growl notifications.
![]() This alert tells me my power cord was disconnected. |
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For example, I use Mail and SpamSieve to process all of my email messages. SpamSieve is Growl-aware, so I always get a quick pop up window every time new non-spam messages are delivered to Mail. That saves me from checking Mail only to find that all I have are junk mail messages.
I also use Growl to tell me when contacts in iChat's Buddy List come online or go away. That way I can keep my Buddy List window in the Dock instead of on my Desktop.
![]() This alert tells me a buddy's status changed to "Away." |
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Check out the list of Growl-aware applications. Odds are you'll find something that's useful for you. And everyone can appreciate the price, too: It's free.
Even though Growl is a no-cost application, that doesn't mean it didn't take any time and effort to develop. If you find Growl useful, make a donation.
Jeff Gamet is TMO's Morning Editor and Reviews Editor. He lectures, teaches and speaks on Mac OS X and design-related topics, and is the author of The Designer's Guide to Mac OS X from Peachpit Press.
if you have tips or tricks to share, or Mac-related questions you want answered.
Observer Comments
Growl is the greatest. The reason it isn't annoying is that you can totally customize if you are bothered, and how, and how often, and by which apps.
What's really annoying are utilities that alert you with modal dialog boxes that interrupt and make you click OK. With Growl, messages fade out on their own without user intervention...if you want. It's your call.
One of the apps that helps me out through Growl is Unplugged, which puts up a message when my power adapter is knocked out of an outlet, in case I'm not paying attention to the battery icon.
I use Growl's network capability to notify me of events I'm interested in that are happening on my Macs elsewhere in the house.
I am doing a programming course, so I'm currently booted in XP for most of the time.
So my first reaction to Growl is "for ******, enjoy your helpful-messages-free system". The number one pain in XP is all those helpful messages distracting me all the time.
Very uninformed opinion, btw, don't know growl at all.
Thu Dec 14, 2006 9:54 pm Subject: Not Annoying, Insanely Useful
I have been using growl almost since the beginning. At first I thought, "man this is going to be annoying sucking up my cpu every time I get a new mail message to show this pretty faded window with the information" but then I realized how much time it really saves me because I can be working on something else and if all I hear is the "new mail" sound, I have to stop doing whatever it is that I'm concentrating on to see if it's something that needs my immediate attention. Now I can quickly glance at a preview that shows up on my screen for a mere few seconds and find out if it needs my immediate attention. And best of all, you can choose a theme that is see-through so it won't bother you even if you're reading something behind where the alert shows up.
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