- HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE MAC OS
- HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE INSTALL
- HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE FULL
- HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE PRO
- HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE SERIES
HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE MAC OS
Mac users have been asking for tabs in Mac OS X’s Finder about as long as we’ve had tabs in our web browsers.
HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE FULL
While all of these utilities are available via the Terminal (as well as other full applications like Onyx), MainMenu keeps them all readily available in a single menubar icon for only $19.00. With the click of a button you can rebuild your Spotlight index, force empty the trash when pesky files just won’t go away, repair permissions, clean system and user caches, repair and eject volumes, and much more. MainMenu is another menubar application that I’ve come to love which places a number of Mac maintenance options at your disposal. While there are apps that will also add the ability to view iCal events and ToDo items in the calendar, MagiCal does this simple task without adding overhead to the system with features I don’t necessarily need. MagiCal for the Mac fixes this shortcoming by giving you a host of options for displaying the date and time in your Mac’s menubar. Windows offers a full calendar in the menubar’s clock. Apple did give us the ability to add the date, but it’s still lacking usefulness for me. Another area that hasn’t improved is the Clock in the menubar. I mentioned in Part 2 that Apple hasn’t offered much in the way of improvements to the Open and Save dialog boxes. If you don’t need more robust FTP features, Courier is a steal at $19.95. You’ll also be provided with an active link to the files you upload. The application is beautiful to look at, but beneath that beauty is a handy history feature that shows you which files you’ve uploaded to what service, and where that server is located by plotting its location on a map. Courier handles drag and drop file uploading to FTP just like Transmit, but also adds the ability to upload images to Flickr, TwitPic and Facebook, videos to Vimeo, and files to Amazon S3 and M圜loudApp. Now you might wonder why I would need another file upload application when I just told you how great Transmit is. There are free FTP apps out there, but for $34 Transmit is a bargain. It’s fantastic if you frequently upload files to the same server. One really handy feature is the ability to create a “Droplet” you can keep on your desktop or in your Dock which automatically uploads any file(s) you drop on it to the specified FTP site. The latest version offers plenty of new features, but the base feature set of uploading files and making minor edits to my HTML and CSS has been enough to keep it installed on my Mac for a long time. I’ve been using it for years and had no reliability issues. Transmit handles FTP, SFTP, WebDav and more.
Panic released an all-encompassing FTP and coding app called Coda, but for simplicity, reliability and features, you can’t beat Transmit for your file transfer needs.
HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE PRO
Snapz Pro X with video capture capability costs you $69 and is well worth it if you do a lot of screen captures. It also gives you the ability to keep the cursor visible, keep or remove drop shadows, add watermarks, and much more.
When it comes to static image capture of your screen, Snapz Pro can capture your entire screen, specific windows, or user definable portions of your screen with a keyboard shortcut, and save it in a number of formats. Snapz Pro X offers everything you would expect in a screen capture utility, with the added ability to capture video and audio of your Mac’s screen (a feature I love to use when a web site attempts to prevent downloading of audio or video!). They all look spectacular, but I’ve stayed with Snapz Pro X because it offers the perfect balance of features at a reasonable price. The last few years has seen several fancy-pants screen capture utilities come to market. The applications listed below contains a few “old timers” and several Johnny-Come-Lately apps that have found a permanent home on my Mac.
HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE SERIES
Today I conclude the series with 10 more apps that I love to use. Last week I published 10 of my favorite apps in Part 1, and another 10 in Part 2.
HYPERDOCK MAC SOFTWARE INSTALL
That being said, most of what I install gets used once or twice, then discarded. Over the years I’ve installed a lot of commercial software, shareware and freeware on my Macs.