ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 20 2007 | mind map, software, Mac
ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 12 2006 | mac, browser
ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 27 2006 | mac, toolsWell, duh... I knew this somehow, but now it's confirmed...when I plug my USB hard drive - formatted as NTFS when I set it up using Windows - into my Mac, I can't write to it. Nor will I ever be able to, apparently, so I'm going to have to reformat it with three partitions - with two boot partitions (HFS+ and NTFS) and the third being FAT32 that everyone can use and where all the files will live. Eek. I can also set it up as a share on my network, although I already have one of those and it's too slow.
ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 24 2006 | mac, blogs, irDAOne way to get my new MacBook set up to handle irDA transfers from my heartrate monitor into a software program I'm using to analyze workouts. I was already thinking about purchasing Parallels...what's one more workaround? Anyone else have any knowledge of a Mac-Compatible IR I/O device? The mini-IR port on the front only works with the iRemote (or whatever they are calling it).
ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 18 2006 | mac, apple
ChipWilcox | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 16 2006 | decision support, simulation, mac, excel
Monte Carlo and Decision Support Add-In that works with both MSFT Office for Windows and Mac...helpful because Decisioneering's Crystal Ball WON'T work with Office for Mac.
Tree Plan is a particularly nice tool for building option trees or for evaluating any "Real Assets" investment decision.
If you like Tornado charts (MBA's in particular love them!) this is another simple tool that works.
Again, while Crystal Ball is by far the best Windows-centric simulation software you can by, these tools here are as good but less slick looking.
Quoted: complete bundle of our three add-ins: TreePlan for decision trees, SensIt for sensitivity analysis, and RiskSim for Monte Carlo simulation



