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RadTech

Applelust is looking to add writers to its staff. If you are interested or want to be part of the Applelust community, drop us a line with your resume or vita. We are always on the look out for good, very smart, and reliable people to join the staff. If you think you have what it takes, let us know.

- The Publisher

iMaculate Conception

Arranged from most recent...


The iMaculate Conception is a column that will explore art, design and aesthetics in general from the point of view of an avid Mac user. As Mac users, we already appreciate the value of good design - Joel Davies will use this basic understanding as a launching point to explore aesthetic issues and fire off the occasional foaming-at-the-mouth rant.

Joel lives with his wife Meg and their weimaraner Demolition Derby in the Midwest. Joel runs the Graphic Design program at a top ranked, Midwestern Jesuit university and is President of the state chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts. Meg, who recently earned her MBA, is a financial guru who cancels out Joel's total lack of business savvy.

Joel holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from a fine Jesuit University, and a Master of Fine Arts from Indiana State University. He has a small freelance design studio (himself) that produces illustration, multimedia and web projects for a variety of local and national companies. Joel actively produces digital artworks on his trusty 400mHz Pismo PowerBook (named "Brimstone"), and longs for a monstrous G4. In the summer months, he can be found working in local parks with Brimstone and a Wacom tablet. His work explores the relationship between science and religion, and is shown in local galleries when it's not traveling the academic circuits. The work is entirely produced on the Mac before being printed on canvas for display.

Joel has been using Apples since his dad (A Physics/Computer Science Professor) brought home an Apple II when Joel was in grade school. His design labs sport nearly 40 iMacs and blue and white G3s, which Joel feeds a steady stream of students daily. His class load currently includes Computer Graphics and Illustration, Web Design and Multimedia Design.

When not producing artwork, freelance design or lecture notes, Joel enjoys playing computer games, basketball, boxing, reading and running around with the dog. He also bowls for his department bowling team, which he considers a form of performance art. As the worst bowler in the league, he enjoys wild displays of celebration for any ball that makes it down the lane. Joel is currently thinking that he is the only bowler that has written or spoken about himself in the third person, a dubious honor that is usually reserved for professional football and basketball players.

joel@applelust.com

  • MacBook Pro (5-17-06) Dr. Neale Monks. A subjective review of the MacBook Pro
  • Freeway 4 Pro (2-28-06) Dr. Neale Monks. Freeway Pro, the Quark-like web design program from Softpress, has been substantially revised and sports a bright new look. But do the changes go more than skin deep? Neale Monks finds out.
  • Astrostack (1-18-06) Dr. Neale Monks. Long respected as one best astronomical image processing applications about, in its newest incarnation AstroStack now runs on the Macintosh. Has the wait been worthwhile?
  • Virtual PC 7 (11-23-05) Dr. Neale Monks. Virtual PC 7 is the update to the venerable Windows emulator to be entirely all Microsoft’s own work. Can Mac users expect to see any dramatic changes?
  • Eudora Pro 6.2 (8-5-05) Dr. Neale Monks. Eudora has been one of the most popular e-mail clients for the Macintosh for more than a decade. Neale Monks finds out how it compares with the Mail application that comes with OS X
  • MacAstronomica (4-22-05) Dr. Neale Monks. How does this amateur naked eye astronomy software stack up?
  • iKey 2.0 (3-11-05) Jeremy Young. How well does this automation utility work? How much time will you save?
  • Wolfram Research Publicon (3-11-05) Jeff Terry Does this new scientific word processor live up to the potential?
  • Microsoft Office 2004, Part 3, Word (1-28-05) Dr. Neale Monks. Are there enough new features to necessitate a jump from v.X?
  • REALbasic 5.5 (12-03-04) Dr. Neale Monks. Neale takes a look at the latest version of this programming package.
  • Office 2004, Part 2, Excel and Entourage (11-05-04) Dr. Neale Monks. In the second part of his review of Office 2004, Neale Monks looks at Excel and Entourage.
  • Phone Valet 2.0 (11-05-04) Pat St-Arnaud. The best question to ask might be "Is there anything that you can't do with this telephone/Mac integration tool?"
  • TiPaint Touch-up Kit and iKlear iPod Cleaning Kit (10-29-04) Dr. Neale Monks. Is it possible to restore the shiny good looks of iPods and PowerBooks even after years of use? Neale Monks looks at two cleaning products designed especially for Apple hardware.
  • Microsoft Office 2004, Part 1, PowerPoint (10-15-04) Dr. Neale Monks. In the first part of his review of Office 2004, Neale Monks looks at PowerPoint, for many people still the benchmark for presentation software.
  • ScrapX (9-17-04) Dr. Neale Monks. Aqueous Software's ScrapX brings the Scrapbook to OS X
  • CDFinder (8-20-04) Dr. Neale Monks. Finding what you want from among a stack of similar looking CDs can be a hassle, but help is at hand. Neale Monks looks at CDFinder, a budget-priced but powerful cataloguing tool.
  • Endnote 7 (8-13-04) Dr. Markus Geisen. EndNote 7 is a literature database that seamlessly interacts with your word processor. Is the latest version worth the upgrade?


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