Search Mac Software Downloads
|
  Main     Utilities     iPulse  

iPulse User Reviews (31 posts)Write A Review
sort: smiles | time
Oct 2 2009

NCIANCA  The latest version (2.10) of iPulse has a huge problem.

"You are now prompted for a password each time you launch iPulse on Snow Leopard"

Why can't it remember the setting? Why do I need to enter a password every time I start iPulse? Apple's "Activity Monitor" does not prompt the user for a password every time it is started.

If it can't be fixed because there are inherent problems with the way that iPulse is implemented, then that security vulnerability should be addressed and fixed rather then creating a huge inconvenience for the users.

This change means that I can no longer have iPulse as a startup item has I have for years.   
(Version 2.1.10)

praisebury
+1
[ Reply ]
Jun 1 2009
**...

CERNIUK  A re-ranking. First and foremost the system lockup problem: If you run iPulse on a laptop and use iDisk or other servers, you will find that iPulse will habitually lock your Mac forcing you to control-command-power hard reboot to get free.

iPulse will check the mounted volumes (hard drives) including remote server volumes periodically to update the usage status. When it does this and the volume is no longer available, it will not time out nor release the query call for disk usage statistics.

Here is the scenario: You are at work and you have a server mounted. Maybe it is your Windows NT corp server, Mac OS X corp server, your iDisk cloud server, or your TimeCapsule volume. You close the lid to sleep the Mac and it sleeps. Pack it in your bag, jet for the door. You then later open your Mac (on the train, at home, etc.) and you have no network connection or a different network connection that does not allow you to get to one of the servers that you were connected to before. iPulse will go brute force against that server asking for statistics and not let go. That server volume appears busy and the Finder cannot let go either. You establish an Internet connection (wifi, ethernet, cell modem, etc) and now nothing seems to be able to talk to the network even though you do have a connection as verified by the Network Preferences in your System Preferences. Then you check your process list (command-option-escape) and note that iPulse is not responding. You figure, ok, just kill it but that thing is a vampire and drains your network connection dry and cannot be killed. Kill Kill Kill, nope nope nope. Then you see your Finder go non-responsive. Kill, nope. Other processes, as they access network resources start to go red including iChat, Pages (oops, update check...) and others. Some kill, some do not. You try launching network utilities that just seem to bounce indefinitely (they are trying to open network connections and the network stack is gridlocked by iPulse, sorry charlie)

Ok, long story short, your Mac is Tango Uniform, time for the three key salute: command-control-power. This time you take iPulse **out** of your login items and come and write a lengthy review about one of your favorite little utilities becoming more pain that it is worth. Sad Monday, lost an old friend.  
(Version 2.1.9)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 17 2009
*****

AV  Brilliant. Ive used it for years now and its the first thing that gets installed on any Mac i use and sits on-top on all windows in the bottom right-hand corner (transparent background and nice subtle coloured indicators). It tells me at-a-glance what the Mac is doing internally - its indispensable. You can see very quickly if an app glitches in the background and the processor is sapping battery power, or if data is being downloaded or uploaded, hard drive is being read, wifi strength, battery indicator etc etc etc - all instantly & beautifully- AND it tells me the time, moon phase and not to forget the info panels! Absolutely Perfect. And the price is also well judged (for me!). Please continue to develop this superb application.  
(Version 2.1.9)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 5 2007
*****

SANS  2.1.8 seems fixed problems I was having (see below). Otherwise, did not see any other resource monitoring tool on Mac, even remotely close to iPulse by UI/Usability/Information per screen real estate/Price ratio! Well deserved 5 stars in each category!  
(Version 2.1.8)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 5 2007
*****

LEE123  Yes, it takes a few minutes to learn the interface but once you do this app is great. It tells you everything activity monitor or x resource graph does but in less space and it is infinitely more customizable. I have been running this for 4 months and it has never crashed or caused me problems. You can also access activity monitor, terminal and network utility with just a right click. Also, instant access to processes, memory and network activity. What a great tool.  
(Version 2.1.8)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Jan 18 2007

SANS  2.1.7 has problems displaying network speeds on my MacBook Pro - negative speeds, ridiculously large speeds, etc. 2.1.6 seems OK.  
(Version 2.1.7)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Nov 23 2006
**...

JAMESKITTY  i hate "conceptual" interfaces. i spent ten minutes trying to figure out where i was supposed to click to get the information i was looking for. even loaded each of the alternate designs included.... still couldn't do it. nor could i figure out what the menubar was supposed to be indicative of.

went straight in to the trash.  
(Version 2.1.6)

praisebury
+1
[ Reply ]
Feb 24 2006

SLOB  Are the previous reviewers using iPulse itself to read CPU load? In which case, yes, it reads 15 to 20% (omm, a p'book with Tiger), but check Activity monitor and it's only using around 2%.  
(Version 2.1.5)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 22 2006
**½..

AMBERV  Maintenance for this product has slipped woefully in the past year. They built the features up to a really great set, but then decided to let a few really major bugs slide -- seemingly for good. It has been many, many months where this app just doesn't work that well with Tiger. They seem to be doing very little to rectify this situation. Look at the latest update -- fixing a graphic in the help file (?!) That's the kind of dumb stuff that doesn't even get mentioned in a Real update. Here, it is a major feature!  
(Version 2.1.5)

praisebury
0
[ 1 Reply - Reply ]
Replies:
Jun 1 2009

CERNIUK  Very true. Part of what we pay for in a product is not just the license to use the product but the continuation of the support of that product. I have endorsed this product personally and prior, it had been part of my mission critical arsenal when running www.army.mil.

With some of the real show stopper bugs going unaddressed for so long (aka lock your system up), and no support revisions in sight, it may not be as good a value as it was 3 years ago.  
(Version 2.1.9)

praisebury
0

Jun 28 2005
****.

ANONYMOUS  I think iPulse is great but every version I've tried since 2.0.2 on Tiger has given me enourmous trouble after an hour of letting the app run. There seems to be a memory leak that is allowing iPulse to consume up to 95% of my iBook's resources. Please get this issue fixed, because the newest features are quite nice except for the fact that they become unusable if the app eats up so much CPU power.  
(Version 2.1.3)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
May 7 2005
****½

ANONYMOUS  Great app but this version gets funky in Tiger. It works ok for awhile but then the cpu indicator turns into a square block and ipulce starts sucking up processor power. I'm looking forward to an update because I miss it on my desktop  
(Version 2.1.2)

praisebury
0
[ 3 Replies - Reply ]
Replies:
Jun 4 2005

LACHY LAYCOCK  Try version 2.0.2 to avoid the square CPU problem:

www.iconfactory.com/software/iPulse_202.dmg  
(Version 2.1.2)

praisebury
0
Jun 16 2005

ANONYMOUS  Use a version that is over a year old? No thanks.  
(Version 2.1.3)

praisebury
0
May 24 2006

ROBEGIAN  The squares come after a while only when a pirated serial number is sensed.

Registering the product with a regularly bought serial number fixes the «problem» ;-)

---

Roberto Giannotta

Trieste, Italy  
(Version 2.1.5)

praisebury
0

Apr 28 2005
*****

PROZACPRETZEL  Great eye candy, and accurate too.  
(Version 2.1.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 28 2005

ANONYMOUS  I wonder when Iconfactory will repair their FTP server !!!! (it is the slowest I know).

I have to download it more than 5 times to test their software.  
(Version 2.1.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 28 2005

ANONYMOUS  I'll just wait for a FREE Dashboard Widget...  
(Version 2.1.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 26 2005
*****

RAUROS  It's simply a GREAT monitor, very useful and cool.

It's skin-able-d from iconfactory too.

G-R-E-A-T.  
(Version 2.1)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 4 2005
*****

SOFTBEND  This may be the best non-obstrusive system monitor interface for Mac OS X. People who are criticizing maybe do not understand the meaning of this tool. The idea is to a a global overview of what's happening, not to have an oversized window with statistics and numbers. And iPulse does this better than any other system monitor. And if you need more precise info, just move the mouse over a graph and a translucent window will appear with more technical information. This is the best shareware I bought since a while.  
(Version 2.1)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 3 2005
**...

ZOOM77@HOTMAIL.COM  This should win an award for worst interface ever. You have to study the preferences to figure out what everything does. You can't tell by looking at it. The dashboard FX is cool but I can't even read it it's so small and the backgorund interferes with what's behind it since it's transparent. This app is useless.  
(Version 2.1)

praisebury
0
[ 1 Reply - Reply ]
Replies:
Feb 4 2005

GEDEON MAHEUX  I think if you would give iPulse a chance, you would quickly start to recognize the individual gauges. Besides, the main UI isn't meant to display *every* single bit of data about your system, its meant to give you a graphical over view of what is going on using simple, circular bars. If something catches your eye you want to learn more about, simply roll your mouse over a bar and the info window will give you an expanded (and quite detailed) view of what is happening under the hood. iPulse is a "quick read" application that lets the user see at a glance what is happening, and one that happens to look good on any number of desktops.  
(Version 2.1)

praisebury
0

Apr 17 2004

ANONYMOUS  a graphical beauty....but not very readable....  
(Version 2.0.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 19 2004

TYCHAY  If you don't want to spring for iPulse (you should) but want your PowerMate to pulse relative to CPU load like the latest version, download ceepeeyou which will enable that from the menu bar.

(No Rating)  
(Version 2.0.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 19 2004
*****

ANONYMOUS  Drop dead beautiful!  
(Version 2.0.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Dec 5 2003
*****

TROY DANIEL  Wow. I mean... Wow. This has got to be the coolest application of Mac OS X. I mean...

Wow. If I were a PC user, and saw this app.. I would say..

"Should I stay or should I go now?". But like every catchy pop song.. the answer can never be found. Its the question that drives Us.

Seriously, this is a cool application. It really beautifies the working environment by excitingly displaying your computers various... shall we say 'moods'. On "My Other Computer"... when it is really moody.. all I see is a blue screen.

This is much nicer than that. Macs rock, PC's suck. (Objectivelly speaking).

Love, Troy  
(Version 2.0.1)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Nov 12 2003
*****

PANTHERMASTER  I use old iBook with 800x600 max res and new panther system, with a typical OS X large size font menu. Two plus two, you will get annoyed by how easy the menu items such as clock, battery status, modem status and battery status disappear being pushed by, say, Word X menu? With iPulse 2.0 it solves everything with a really elegant way. Clock+date and battery status are combined together in a pulse-like-intelligent-look circle. CPU, RAM, modem speed are shown in an attractive colorful gauge. Warning indicator (such as if you have 10% battery remain) is very useful. The form (appearance) of the gauge can be change easily, either in its size (max 128), opacity, or it's skin (use downloadable jackets). Overall, it's an excellent piece of software that make me wonder why Apple does not implement this in the OS. The systems indicator (CPU, RAM, etc) seems to be carefully calculated, not just showing how many percentage free resources you are having. And finally, a last but not least feature is that you can see the details of each system components in an elegant fade-able transparent pop up window upon hovering the mouse on the gauge. Nice touch!  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Nov 2 2003
*****

HIRO  This program is just too cool for its own right. Design wise I think there is something here that developers/programmers could all learn from quality interface design. Although system moniter apps tend to be bland quite often, iPulse breaks the barrier with having a feature of changing "jackets". It makes you proud of owning a mac once again.  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Oct 11 2003
****½

KEVIN  Nice upgrade from 1.0. Thanks.  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Oct 9 2003

CHIEFTYPIST  Dave - You can use the system hotkey to enable/disable the ignore mouse feature. Go to the Global preference pane and set it (there's also a hotkey to turn the window on/off.)  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Oct 9 2003

DAVE FICK  Your are able to disable clicking on the floating window, which is great! However, some of us disable the dock icon by going through the package contents. If I do both then there's no way of accessing the preferences. Some sort of solution to that would be nice.  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Oct 9 2003
****½

DAVE FICK  This really is a kick ass program. It should come standard w/ panther!  
(Version 2.0)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Sep 28 2003
*****

MVK  I've been using iPulse since the 1.0 release, and think it's great. Just a quick glance tells me how my system is performing. Ignore the confused guy below- use it for a bit, and you'll see how simple and logical the display is. There are many options to control how it behaves, so it will only display what you need to know, and it won't clutter up your desktop unless you want it to. It's worth every cent, and one more reason to support shareware.  
(Version 1.0.3)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Apr 10 2003
**...

ANONYMOUS  Not a bad idea, but I find the whole interface too confusing. Also there's enough stuff on my desktop without adding more - better off putting itself in the menu-bar like 'MenuMeters' which is my app of choice, and it's FREE.  
(Version 1.0.3)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Feb 16 2003

ANONYMOUS  This makes "top" look like a dinosaur. This is a great system monitoring tool for anyone who wants to keep an eye on there system.  
(Version 1.0.2)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
Dec 21 2002
*****

LAIRD POPKIN  Beautiful little application  
(Version 1.0.1)

praisebury
0
[ Reply ]
 

The opinions expressed in the reviews are not necessarily those of MacUpdate.
MacUpdate waives any legal binding related to the comments and opinions expressed in the reviews.
Please contact MacUpdate politely if you wish for a comment to be reviewed by MacUpdate for removal.