Mac360 Twitter TweetsSponsorship and Advertising on Mac360Forums Member LoginRegister for Mac360 ForumsFrequently Asked QuestionsYouTube Video WatchDashboard Widget WatchPolls & SurveysMac360 Power Search Options
RSS FeedThe Mac360 Article ArchiveThe Cheap MacWhat's New!Mac Tips & TricksMacintosh User ForumsMac360 Reviews

Got CDs? DVDs? Books? Get CD, DVD Or Bookpedia.

Books DVDs Bambi wondered if a book, CD or DVD library application was a solution looking for a problem.

For some, iCal or AddressBook might be a solution looking for a problem. But both solve problems most of us have.

I’ve got books, CDs, and DVDs and friends who borrow each. That’s a problem and now I have a solution.

We started a bit of an uproar when Bambi described Delicious Monster’s Delicious Library as a solution looking for a problem.

Hamburger for one, is steak for another. One person’s problem is another person’s idea and a customer’s solution.

Jack and I combined two families and the end result is that we have a book collection which rivals Borders and nearly as many DVDs as the Blockbuster down the street. Neighbors come here first when a new DVD hits Blockbuster. Oh, did I mention hundreds of CDs?

Each collection of DVDs and books has its own shelf. Until this week we had no real idea exactly how many books or DVDs we had. CDs? Hey, they’re all inside iTunes where they belong.

That’s it. We have a problem. A growing and messy collection of DVDs and books and CDs. As a rather large family made up of individual families, we have relatives and friends who “borrow” both books and CDs.

Do I keep track of who got what? Of course not. At least, that’s what it used to be.

Enter Bruji Software. And Bruji the dog. Bruji (the software folks who named their dog Bruji) develop and publish DVDpedia, CDpedia and Bookpedia, applications which act as a library for your media and books.

So, if you don’t have a huge book collection but have plenty of DVDs, just use DVDpedia. Reverse that for books and CDs. All three applications are Universal Binaries so they’ll run on PPC Macs and new Intel Macs and still cost you less than Delicious Library.

What do you get with each? For DVDpedia you can use your iSight camera (or a scanner) to scan bar codes on your DVDs.

That simple process gets information about the DVD into DVDpedia, including DVD covers, movie information, all the detail you don’t want to enter into a list by hand.

The screen layout is different than Delicious Library, opting more for the iTunes, iPhoto layout of left column, main column, so navigation is straightforward.

Just as straightforward is the Borrowed DVD feature, including a due date. That means you can loan a DVD to a friend or relative, set a due date, and their contact information comes straight from Apple’s AddressBook.

Since all the information you’re collecting goes into a database, there’s statistics, Spotlight integration, sync with .Mac, even a wishlist.

Bruji includes a Widget for your Mac’s Dashboard, though most of us know that Widgets truly are a problem looking for a solution.

Bookpedia works pretty much the same way. iSight can scan the book’s bar code and pull up information about the book.

There’s the Borrowed Book feature, AddressBook integration for borrowers, a Wishlist collection, and so on.

There’s also a nifty MLA style bibliography draw-up which comes in handy when you have books that may show up in school book reports.

DVDpedia and Bookpedia export information to iPods so you always know what you’ve got in your home Borders or Blockbuster.

Applications which catalog your books and DVDs are certainly a solution to those of us with problems managing our collections. The larger the family, the more books and DVDs to worry about.

Books run $10 to $50 each, on average. DVDs are $5 to $25, sometimes more for the collections that Jack so loves. Multiply each times a few hundred and the total collection is valuable enough to keep track of.

Just as you’ll be impressed with the look and functionality of Delicious Library, so will you like the straightforward, intuitive DVDpedia and Bookpedia.

I’ve added both to my collection of Mac applications which have managed to provide a solution to a problem. Now I just need a Mac Applicationpedia to keep track of all my Mac utilities.

Post your own Comment.

Classy Mac360 PhotoBy Carol Mary Miller | I teach English in Paris, France. My husband works for a US technology company here. He switched from PCs to the Mac 12 years ago. I told him it would improve our marriage, give us more friends, and reduce stress. It did.

• Email This Article  •  Follow Mac360 on Twitter
• Posted in the Encore Reviews Section

Off Topic Note: You can help support Mac360. Order your copy of Mac OS X Snow Leopard from Mac360 through Amazon. Snow Leopard is $29 for the Single User Upgrade, and only $49 for the 5 User Family Pack Upgrade. Elsewhere around Mac360, Kate Mac is back after dumping Windows. Ron has updated the NoodleMac site to include more mini reviews of Mac software, and launched Mac musings on McSolo.

Mac360 posts daily Mac updates on Twitter, too. If you Twitter, give Alexis, Bambi, or Ron a tweet and follow Mac360 on Twitter to get daily Mac tips and tricks.

Diary
Journal or Diary. Your life is worth remembering beyond photographs.
Wed Nov 4 - Full Article »
Email
What? You don't use email stationary? Try these free templates.
Tue Nov 3 - Full Article »
Dock
Why not just add another Dock to make your Mac more efficient?
Mon Nov 2 - Full Article »
Snow Leopard
What's in the FORUMS?
Mac360 Link Farm