TheStreet.com’s Blum: Automator is awesome (I just don’t know who makes it or how it got on my Mac)

“Want to know what might be the best reason to put a spiffy new Apple Mac in your small business office? It’s not the hip ads or the easy-on-the-hand keyboard that comes with the iMac, or the ridiculous debate about whether Apples or PCs running the Microsoft Windows operating system are faster or easier to use,” Jonathan Blum writes for TheStreet.com.

MacDailyNews Take: Yes, it is ridiculous that some people are still debating whether Macs or Windows PCs are “faster” or “easier to use.” Apple Macs have been proven study after study after study after study to boost productivity, decrease support costs, offer lower total cost of ownership (TCO) and retain their value far longer than Windows PCs. In hundreds of independent reviews, Apple’s Mac OS X is the clear winner over Microsoft’s Windows (VIsta or the ancient XP).

Blum continues, “Rather, for my small business money, the single most exciting productivity tool probably lies hidden deep inside some Macs: Automator. This piece of code, which Apple describes as a ‘personal automation assistant,’ is part of the new Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac (starting at $400) suite of office software. Yes, you have to buy the whole Office software package to get Automator.”

MacDailyNews Take: Wha? Do some research. Please. For once. Automator is part of Mac OS X. It has shipped on every Mac since the release of Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger on April 29, 2005. Microsoft’s bloated Office is definitely NOT required. Hey, it’s TheStreet.com, what do you expect? Automator is an application developed by Apple for Mac OS X that implements point-and-click (or drag-and-drop) creation of workflows for automating repetitive tasks. Automator enables the repetition of tasks across a wide variety of programs, including the Finder, the Safari web browser, iCal, Address Book and more. It can also work with third-party applications such as Microsoft Office or Adobe Photoshop. More about Apple’s Automator here. Apple’s Automator Actions website is here. None of this is surprising because, as we saw less than a month ago (‘Tech guru’ spreads the FUD about Macs in business – May 30, 2008), Jonathan Blum knows pretty much nothing about Macs.

With that major correction out of the way, Blum loves his Automator, even if he has no idea what it is, who makes it, or how it got on his Mac. Blum writes, “For the right operation, the gains possible with Automator are enormous. And it is this simple: Think of how slick it would be to get the boring, repetitive stuff that bogs you down all day out of the way. And my read here is firm: Somebody, somewhere is going to make a lot of money with Automator. That person might as well be you.”

Full article here.

MacDailyNews Note: Contact: Jonathan Blum

58 Comments

  1. woah… great investigative reporting there… real brilliance… ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”smile” style=”border:0;” />

    thestreat.com <– easy targets for anybody smarter then a gerble. ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”smile” style=”border:0;” />

  2. The last time I went to the Street.com APPL was still less than $50…

    As MDN said, hasn’t the discussion over Mac and Windows been had and the answer given? As with Street, they are useless and don’t deserve anyone’s visits.

  3. @Ampar

    “But didn’t Microsoft buy Apple in 1997?

    (That still floats around the intarweb. Probably from Afib.)”

    LOL yep and I still get this from IT people, can you turn off Appletalk, we don’t want to flood our network with all that chatter!!! HUH? LOL….

    “I even had a guy tell me, Apple did nothing but steal Xerox, its all shown on that movie, go check it out.” Uh yeah.. right.

  4. Give the guy a break. You can’t expect a professional writer for a major financial news source to enter “automator” into Google and click any of the top ten results to learn the most elementary information about something before writing about it. If you want that level of research you’d better stick to an 8 year-old’s school book report.

  5. Automator is cool and all. It does meet Apple’s goal of bringing Apple Script to the average user too. I guess I’m still the hardcore geek, I still prefer to write my Automations using XCode and Apple Script.

  6. In his defense, and I’m the one who alerted MDN to this article, Office 2008 full version do come with what MS calls Automator Actions for Workflows in Microsoft Office, so that’s probably what he saw and had never heard of Automater before. I did e-mail him (it’s a pretty easy link to find in the article) to fill him in on this info, and noted in my e-mail to him as I will here that many of us Mac users feel Automater is underdeveloped and underpromoted by Apple.

  7. “I guess I’m still the hardcore geek, I still prefer to write my Automations using XCode and Apple Script.”

    Yes, yes you are.

    ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”grin” style=”border:0;” />

  8. IT guy: These guys have some nerve to write such false infomration merely because there’s no comment section and people cannot respond to him.

    You’ve got a point there. However, TheStreet.com has a Readers’ Feedback section. Change the subject menu to Article Comment and let the editor knows how inaccurate Blum’s article is. Granted that other readers won’t see your comment, but if the editors are honest (though I am skeptical given theStreet.com’s continuing inaccurate articles), they’ll be more careful in weeding out lies and misinformation from his future articles.

  9. Let me get this straight:

    You find a piece of software on your computer with no clue as to as to who made or how it got there, but proceeded to write a entire article about its virtues WITHOUT ACTUAL RESEARCH??!!

    I think I’m in the wrong business.

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