MarsEdit

I was telling a friend about my experience with offline blogging software. He pointed me to MarsEdit. I hadn’t heard of it before, it wasn’t a free application. I usually don’t download anything but free software. This time I did download it and after using MarsEdit for a couple of weeks I decided to buy it. I have been using it ever since. I like it a lot and want to talk about what I like and some of the things that I would like to see in the application.

MarsEdit main window.

Why do I need this type of software?

You may be wondering what the point is in having offline blogging software. The main reason is because when I want to write a blog entry I hate having to open the browser, go to the blog, login and make a new entry. I’ve had bad experiences with writing blog posts and emails in the browser window. I am scared to death while I write my post the browser is going to crash! I know a lot of blogging software such as WordPress saves your post while you’re working on it. In my experience though, it’s never enough!

Another reason for offline blogging software is if you are like me and you have multiple blogs, it is really nice to be able to update them all from a convenient location. Currently, I have 4 blogs plugged into MarsEdit. Whenever I need to make a post on one of them I can simply open the application and make the post. Also, if I see a mistake that I have made in my entry it’s so much easier to open MarsEdit, make the change and re-submit instead of having to go to the browser, to the blog, re-login, etc. I can blog much more easily and more often!

What I like about MarsEdit

MarsEdit editor.

First of all I have to say I absolutely love the MarsEdit icon! I know I don’t talk about the icons of applications a lot but this is one of my absolute favorite icons. It’s very sexy on my dock!

There are a lot of great features in MarsEdit but there are not a ton of icons cluttering up the application. It’s very simple and clean and I really like that. Instead of having an icon for every little thing there is a drop down menu with a lot of options for inserting HTML or custom tags. I also love the fact that there are keyboard shortcuts for a lot of these, especially the command to paste a link (Option + Command + A).

For each blog you have, you can set up different options. You can choose what warnings you want to receive before your entry is posted; such as warning you if you’ve not set a category or entered a title for your post. You can also choose which services you would like to ping to let the blogging world know that you’ve just made a new entry on your blog.

I also really like the simplicity of the “Save as Draft” button. You click the button as many times as you’d like while you are working on your entry. If you exit the application you can come back and work on it at a later time. But what I really like about it is the fact that whenever I finish the post and I post it to my blog it is no longer in my drafts folder. In my opinion it’s a much better option than using the typical “Save” or “Save As.”

What I’d like to see in MarsEdit

The first change to the application that I would like to see is whenever you are uploading images to your post that the application know which blog you are working on and upload to the appropriate folder.

Using MarsEdit you can choose whether people can leave comments & TrackBacks for your entries. However, you cannot make a password protected post, change the slug, or many of the other things you can do with a WordPress blog.

Although I really love this application and am glad that I made the purchase of it; there is one more thing that I would really like to see added into this application. That is the ability to make new categories. You can select from already created categories but you can’t make new ones (to my knowledge). I have to post the entry and then go to the website and add the proper categories. Granted, I’d have to go to the website anyways to make sure the entry was posted correctly. It would just be really nice not to have to log back in if everything else is correct just to add a category.

I know what you’re probably thinking after reading those two paragraphs above and I’m going to address it right now. Since this application is a cross platform (supports many content management systems) blogging tool; it would be extremely difficult to get every single option that all the blogging platforms offer into the application. I don’t think it would be impossible but it would be difficult because there are always new features to all of these blogging platforms. Also, I am sure there are some limits as to what developers can implement with some blogging systems due to the fact that some systems are closed source.

Do I recommend this application to others?

Yes, I most certainly do recommend it. Since purchasing the application I have blogged a whole lot more because of it. It’s so nice just to be able to open up an application and start blogging. I realize there are other applications out there, even free alternatives. In my opinion none of them can compare to the ease of use of MarsEdit or how fast it works (the others took FOREVER to launch and were very clumsy). MarsEdit offers a LOT of features, I barely scratched the surface! I feel as though my $24.95 was well spent!

MarsEdit from Red Sweater Software

Article update: Wednesday, October 1, 2008: I have updated this article with screen shots from the latest version. I also updated the grammar, at least, I tried to. I have been updating the screen shots on TechButter so that the pages look uniform with the new theme.

The image uploading tool has been improved. You can now specify which blog you are uploading to. When you do open the image uploading tool it connects to the blog you are currently working on. You can now choose from previously uploaded images or images in your catalog. Also, you can connect MarsEdit to Flickr and use images in your account.

The ability to make new categories has been added. Also, you can now change the post slug (what the URL of the post will be). You can also edit the post excerpt and the tags. To my knowledge there is no way to password protect a post using MarsEdit.

I have to be honest with you. Although I really love MarsEdit and have paid for the updated version, I don’t use it as much as I use to. If I were on my Mac more often I probably would. Since getting a new monitor for my PC I’ve been using my Windows machine as my primary workstation again and I post entries to my blog using my web browser. I do think MarsEdit is a great application and would highly recommend it to anyone looking for that type of functionality.

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11 Responses to “MarsEdit”

  1. Daniel Jalkut Says:

    Great writeup and I’m really glad you liked most of what you’ve seen in MarsEdit.

    The main reason is because when I want to write a blog entry I hate having to open the browser, go to the blog I want to blog on, login and make a new entry.

    That’s a great summary of why MarsEdit is Good. :)

    Regarding your comments on what you’d like to see in MarsEdit, let me comment on some of them so you know what you might expect:

    Uploading images should be smarter about defaulting to the receptacle for the blog you’re editing. Sounds like a no-brainer to me. I’m going to be revising the image upload UI quite a bit over the coming months so stay tuned.

    Regarding the WordPress integration - most, if not all, of these limitations are based in limitations with the XML-RPC interface to WordPress. I’ve gotten in touch with the WordPress developers and the good news is they are making some pretty substantial changes to the interface. I can’t guarantee those changes will translate to support for everything we want, but it might at least get us partway there.

    I think the inability to add categories is tied up in the same interface limitations alluded to above. But I’ll double-check this in case things have changed in recenth history.

    Thanks again for the thoughtful write-up, and please stay tuned to the updates over the coming months to see what other improvements are in store.

  2. Andy Melton Says:

    WOW! That was a fast reply! It always amazes me that people can read an entry that I make so quickly AND that it was from the developer of the application! Thanks for reading my post and responding. It gives me an even better feeling about purchasing software from indie developers because I can actually interact with the developers! I definitely look forward to the updates to MarsEdit!!!

  3. Daniel Jalkut Says:

    One of the advantages of being a one-man-show is if anybody in the company knows anything about the customer, it’s me :) So I try to keep up to date with what people are thinking and saying about my products. I think this is a major advantage over larger companies where no one person would be so interested.

    (It would be impossible without tools like Technorati and Mint!)

  4. Tim Says:

    Bah! TextEdit, all the way.
    Just kidding.

    I’ve been wanting to try something like MarsEdit for a long time, but then I’d have one less excuse for not blogging more often. I used to use the fore-runner to Ecto (can’t remember what it was called), back when I was a big MovableType guy. It worked, but just “okay”. But I never really liked it. Then I switched to WordPress, started rough-drafting my posts first in TextEdit, and finally copy-pasting them into the “write post” field in WP. Kind of the log way around, but it worked. Sue me, I’m old.

    As always, Andy, great review. I might have to drop $25 on MarsEdit next payday.

  5. Andy Melton Says:

    Tim - I use to edit my posts the same way. I’d open a text editor or a word processor and write my entry. The problem is, I’d format it in the word processor and then have to re-format it in the WordPress editor. I’d have to add links, etc. It’s just really nice to do everything within one application and hit the submit button and if I have to edit, I can use the same application. For me, it really pays off since I have multiple blogs.

  6. Tim Says:

    I hear you, Andy. Trouble is, I got used to doing it in TextEdit (yes, hand coding every image tag and anchor tag) because the little javascript buttons for formatting, adding links, etc. never showed up in Safari. I know, I know, “use Firefox”, and I do, sometimes, but it just seems like such a memory hog to me. Thankfully, WordPress 2.1 addressed the javascript button problem in Safari, they show up now, but I still tend to write all my posts in TextEdit.

    Call me old fashioned. Or just call me “old”.

    I really DO wanna try MarsEdit though. I’m not THAT set in my ways! Maybe it would inspire me to blog/vlog more than once a month…

  7. Shawno Says:

    Anyone know if MarsEdit has support for MySpace blogs? I’d love to be able to post entries to my WordPress blog and my MySpace blog without having to log in to both sites. That’d save me a lot of time.

  8. Daniel Jalkut Says:

    Shawno: As far as I know myspace doesn’t have a public API (interface) for editing or publishing blog entries. If and when they add one, I’ll look into adding support in MarsEdit.

  9. Shawno Says:

    Thanks for the response, Daniel! Figures that MySpace would be all not-having a public API. Bastards!

  10. Andy Melton Says:

    @Shawno: MySpace isn’t a real blog! You need Twitter! ;)

  11. Shawno Says:

    I am reluctant to get into the Twitter, Andy. Maybe. But MySpace IS a good place for marketing, just ’cause so MANY people use it.

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