Sofa Control: Total Control With Your Apple Remote

Since the introduction of the first Intel iMac, Apple included a simple white remote with every new machine sold (until recently where they started charging extra for the remote when purchasing a notebook). Up until the release of Sofa Control, the Apple Remote has been limited to controlling Front Row, iTunes, Keynote, and volume control. Sofa Control introduces a whole new way of using your Apple remote to control your Mac.
When you first launch Sofa Control a message will a appear telling you that Sofa Control is enabled and ready to interface with your Apple Remote. Now all you have to do is grab your Apple Remote, sit down on your sofa, and press menu. A nice translucent app launcher will appear immediately. From here you can launch the DVD Player, Front Row, or any other program that interfaces with Sofa Control. To really get a feel of how Sofa Control works, you can hold down Menu until the Global Menu pops up. From here you can set your sound volume, control your Mac using a virtual mouse, and even power down your Mac; all with nothing but your Apple Remote.
Sofa Control is also very customizable. To start, you can change the look of the control panel, add some costume Apple Scripts to your Global Menu, and even pick the main display you would like Sofa Control to run on.
Apart from the awesome in-app functionality, Sofa Control additionally works great with other applications such as Keynote, Preview, iTunes, and Quicktime. You can easily flip through slides in a presentation or play a Quicktime file, all with a click of your Apple Remote. A new cool addition to Sofa Control is the Mouse Light which highlights your mouse with a yellow circle, similar to Mouseposé. This feature is very helpful when giving presentations.
You can grab Sofa Control today from Gravity Apps for only $15.
#1
Matt → www.thisguysvoice.com
Wow, I have been looking for an inexpensive way to control my mb with my remote! Everything I have tried has either been to expensive for it to be worth it or just too counter-intuitive. Thanks, guys!
#2
Austin Heller → austinheller.com
The first remotes were actually introduced three months earlier, with the last PowerPC iMac.
Just sayin’.
#3
Tom Burke → fliptron.com
The compatibility with Keynote and Preview sounds like the most useful feature the software offers… It’s pretty amazing those two applications haven’t always had remote support.
#4
SyeefYou spelt custom wrong, you wrote “costume” when it’s actually “custom”
#5
Elliott Cost → www.elliottcost.com
Tom, you can still control Keynote without Sofa Control, but with Sofa Control you will get a whole bunch more functionality. One of the main advantages is the individual prefs in apps that work with Sofa Control. You can learn more about this in my screen cast: http://www.vimeo.com/1021326