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Day Link Icon Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Path Finder 4.5 Software (posted at 11:30 PM by Philippe Martin)

CocoaTech released Path Finder 4.5 today. There's a lot of new features in this version, most notably Undo Support, Superuser Mode, multiple Shelves and Check For Updates. But there's more (including many bug fixes). Check out the changes log for all the gory details.

Congrats to Steve, Sasha and Neil!



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Day Link Icon Monday, July 31, 2006
DesktopSweeper at The Apple Blog Software (posted at 3:38 PM by Philippe Martin)

Amos Moses Griffin likes DesktopSweeper too and mentions it in his Quest For A More Mindful Mac, at The Apple Blog:

"DesktopSweeper hides the ugly sores on your desktop. Hitting Cmd-Return (it can be changed) turns your screen into blissful, serene emptiness. Hit it again and you’ll be reverted back to your urban jungle. Think of DesktopSweeper as your Holy Rod of Power. One quick flick and it smites into oblivion everything before it."

Cool. :)



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Day Link Icon Monday, July 17, 2006
John Udell likes DesktopSweeper Software (posted at 3:58 PM by Philippe Martin)

Jon Udell (yes, the famous writer and analyst) shares my taste for distraction-free desktops, and shows how he achieves it in this six minutes screencast. The only part of the method he presents that's not implemented directly in OS X is done using my DesktopSweeper. Indeed, I've always thought that such a feature should be part of the OS.

The method I use to get about the same results as what Jon describes is virtual desktops. Sometimes I have so many windows open that even using Expose isn't practical. Virtual desktops allow me to group windows by application, or by task, or project, and to switch between desktops using hotkeys.

For example I'm working in Frontier with 25 windows open (you wouldn't believe how fast Frontier windows can multiply! ;)) and I receive a chat invitation. All I have to do, then, is to press the hotkey that takes me to my iChat's desktop. Oh, look, it's Seth telling me that he just sent me that email I was waiting for. Good. I press the hotkey that takes me to my mail desktop, and here it is. When I'm done, I press the hotkey that takes me back to the Frontier desktop, and that's it. You may think that it's easy to do the same by hiding applications, but this was voluntarily a simple example. In fact, I often have windows grouped by project or task, and then it might involve hiding and showing three or four different applications.

Anyway, I couldn't have advertised DesktopSweeper half as well if I tried. So thanks, Jon. :)

Next step, Slashdot. ;)



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