![]() Over time, I’ve found it faster to find files in the shell than in finder. It’s a lot of little things that add up to being big things. Thank you for this thread - some real gems to be found here! Hopefully, someone will find something useful in the above. If you are interested, use the trial first, to give it a go, before deciding. That said, I reached out to the developer on Twitter, who confirmed he has other projects on the go, but unless something radical changes in macOS, it will continue working for the foreseeable future. (Note: It is not being actively developed any more. I plan on posting this Reply by hitting CMD+/, typing ‘reply’, and hitting Enter - and then chuckling ever so faintly at my fingers not leaving the keyboard… Ok, it could be.īut still - if you are a heavy, heavy keyboard/shortcut user – who considers the trackpad or mouse to be a confirmation of defeat in the war of input devices, then have a look at Shortcat. Ok, maybe 70-80% of your work, on most days. I don’t use this nearly as much as what I could, but in theory, this could see you getting 90% of your work done without ever(?) taking your fingers off the keyboard. It is the glue that ties together some of my KM macros, when the latter cannot even get in there, to interact with what is on the screen. Rather just have a look at the gif on the website. Nothing I can say can really describe this applet. ![]() Want to know who changed what, and uploaded what, when? If you value saving time, and how the little things in life can make all the difference, then just buy it already.ĭo you write by means of saving things in Dropbox? Do you collaborate with others, using Dropbox? Maybe it doesn’t get that much attention because what it does is so seamless, that it kind of just drops away into the background.īut like Alfred/Launchbar, try and save stuff (and we all save stuff all the time, right?) on a Mac without DFX installed, and you will think something is broken. Seriously, this app should be part of the Hazel, TE/Alfred/Launchbar, Keyboard Maestro triumvirate. But figured I would mention both regardless.Īs in the heading, trigger the app to take a screenshot of anything on your Mac’s screen, OCR it, and send that text to clipboard etc etc etc.ĭepending on what you do each day on your Mac, this could be life-changing. Not sure why/how I have both of these, but since the first starts up at log-in, whereas the second was tucked away under utilities, I probably decided option 1 was better. I said ‘gently’, because it does – but since I get annoyed each time it reminds me I could’ve used a shortcut key, the problem is clearly in the chair, not in the computer… Grabbing/OCR’ing text from a screenshot: Hotkey-Eve is a little notification-based app, that ‘gently’ reminds you when you have used a menu to trigger something, when a shortcut for that same action exists. ![]() I wouldn’t say I use it constantly – but it’s useful when I do… A nice-to-have, rather than a must-have. Ke圜ue by Ergonis Software, allows you to overlay a display window (fully customisable) that shows you all available shortcut keys for the active Application, the System (macOS) and any Keyboard Maestro macro shortcuts… I have too many that I have allocated, but don’t use frequently enough to remember – and Ke圜ue helps. Here are some that I use frequently (or less frequently), some of which might be well known, but I haven’t seen much mention of: Shortcut utilities:
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