Review of Reunion 9 at MacGasm.net

Grant Brünner at Macgasm.net has put together a review of Reunion 9 as part of his “Genealogy on your Mac” series. He took a look at the user experience / user interface and talked a bit about it. He also took a look at syncing up your Reunion 9 genealogy … Read more

iScrapbook 1.1.0

iScrapbook 1.1 was released today. iScrapbook is the newest Mac OS X scrapbooking application. It requires Mac OS X 10.4 and sells for $49.99 and comes with over 40,000 photos/clipart. It can be downloaded here (ChronosNet.com/Products/iScrapbook). Changes: * Added several image optimizations that make the software more responsive and result … Read more

iScrapbook 1.0 Available

iScrapbook 1.0 is now available. It’s the latest Mac scrapbooking application to come out, and is from Chronos. It’s $49.95 and comes with the “SOHO Art Pack” which includes 40,000+ photos/clipart. It can be downloaded here From the developer’s website: iScrapbook is a digital scrapbook tool designed for both novice … Read more

iScrapbook – Coming April 2007

Chronos has announced iScrapbook (official site here), a new Mac scrapbooking application that will be available in April of 2007 (and until then, there is a pre-order price of $29.99 vs $49.99 normal). It’s a Universal Binary, requiring Mac OS X 10.4. Among the features – it allows you to … Read more

iRemember Scrapbooking Contest

If you are into scrapbooking, and have used iRemember from Intriguing Development, or are thinking about it, there is a contest that you might want to join. iRemember is Mac OS X “digital scrapbooking” software.

MemoryMiner 1.04

MemoryMiner 1.04 is out, and it’s a very interesting piece of software. The developer’s do a much better job of describing it than I could: At its core, are a simple set of tools for treating photos (particularly rare, “pre-digital” photos) as individual frames in a type of endless story board. The story elements are linked to each other by way of annotation layers identifying the people, places, dates and events captured in each frame. As links are made, it becomes easy and tremendously interesting to explore the threads which link people’s lives across time, place and shared experience.