OS X

This may sound like an infomercial, but it’s not going to be one. However if it makes you feel any better feel free to use your inner Billy Mays (RIP) voice to read this article.

HI! Billy Mays here for Mail Drop. The app that you can use with Mail.app and Salesforce.

My job uses Salesforce and although it is nice to have all your information on the Internet for easy access, sometime a Mac user is left in the dust since there is no easy way to get incoming emails into salesforce. That is until recently when doing some research for a client I stumbled upon Maildrop, an application that you can use to get your emails from Mail.app (or Entourage) into salesforce with out having to go through multiple steps.

It’s pretty straight forward, there is either a window that floats above your mail application or you can access it through your AppleScript menu up in the menu bar. Select the “Add Email” option and Maildrop will then go ahead and try to find the correct contact based on their email address. If it can’t find the email address you have the ability to add the person or you could just add it to an account, case, opportunity, or contract. It will also take any attachments that are in the email and upload those as well. This is a real plus for me since I am dealing with contracts and to have them automatically attached to the record is wonderful.

There is one little gotcha with Maildrop and that is you need to have a Salesforce “token” attached to your password in order for it to work. Don’t worry though, it is an easy thing to get and Maildrop will give you the necessary directions on how to get this token.

So if you are like me and use an Mac and Salesforce, give Maildrop and try. The price is right (free) and you’ll thank me later.

{ 0 comments }

Snow leopard woes revisited

by aaron on September 29, 2009

Well, since my last post I decided to bite the bullet and do a fresh install of the operating system know as Snow Leopard (or as its friends call it OSX 10.6). I have been gathering little files here and there for many years, most likely since I had my titanium PowerBook and had just been continuing to migrate time after time. After a while it is time for the slate to be wiped clean and start from scratch, and so last week I did just that.

The install process was simple and painless since Apple doesn’t really give you any choices about how to install the OS, it just does what it needs to do. Things are running a lot smoother now that the nuke and pave was done although there are some slow downs every so often but I attribute that to the slow hard drive that is in the MacBook Pro as opposed to anything else. I also decided to go back to the stock version of VMWare fusion and not the beta that I have been running since I want to keep the machine running as well as possible.

As far as the woes go, it looks like they are over.

{ 0 comments }

Snow Leopard woes

September 22, 2009

I finally upgraded my MacBook Pro to Apple’s latest operating system release, Snow Leopard and for the most part I am pretty impressed with the OS. As the reviews have said, it’s not a revolutionary upgrade but it’s an important one nevertheless since it sets the stage for future releases because this upgrade leaves anything [...]

0 comments Read the full article →