OS X – The Graphic Mac http://www.thegraphicmac.com Apple, Adobe, Graphic Design, Resources Sun, 02 Sep 2018 01:47:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.2 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-favicon-32x32.png OS X – The Graphic Mac http://www.thegraphicmac.com 32 32 30361562 How to backup your Text Substitution settings http://www.thegraphicmac.com/how-to-backup-your-text-substitution-settings/ Thu, 28 Apr 2016 16:00:01 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11888 It’s so simple that I can’t imagine anyone ever figuring it out on their own. 

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Get your OS X 10.11.4 Combo & Delta updaters here http://www.thegraphicmac.com/get-your-os-x-10-11-4-combo-delta-updaters-here/ Tue, 22 Mar 2016 11:42:04 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11844 If you’re ready to update to the latest El Capitan release, but hate amount of time it takes to download via the Mac App Store—and the fact that you don’t have an installer left behind to use on other Macs—then what you want are one of these two installers from Apple.

El Capitan Update

Combo Update: Updates any version of El Capitan, including the recent betas. I find this the most useful DMG to keep around.
Delta Update: Will only update El Capitan version 10.11.3 or the recent 10.11.4 betas. This will be the quickest download (though not by much).

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Apple Watch screensaver for OS X http://www.thegraphicmac.com/apple-watch-screensaver-for-os-x/ Wed, 09 Mar 2016 17:00:12 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11821 If you like having new screensaver on your Mac, grab this Apple Watch screensaver from Rasmus Nielsen.

Apple Watch screensaver

With 5 different watch faces and 15 color combinations to choose from, it’s Retina-ready, free and looks beautiful. You can download it here.

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Can you really replace Mac OS X’s Finder? http://www.thegraphicmac.com/can-you-really-replace-mac-os-xs-finder/ Mon, 23 Nov 2015 15:00:40 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11633 Commander OneWhen I decided to take a look at Commander One, I did so with the expectation that I was going to be looking at something that was equal to or better than apps I was already familiar with and/or used on a regular basis—such as XtraFinder, Path Finder, Transmit, etc.. After looking at the feature list of Commander One, I immediately wondered if it could possibly deliver on the promises it made.

Commander One is what you would call a Finder Enhancement app. It simply recreates Finder windows and adds a multitude of tweaks and features to them. This is nothing new; XtraFinder does this to some extent, and and Path Finder have done these things for years. But Commander One promises to offer Path Finder-level features, plus a built-in FTP manager, at an affordable price through the Mac App Store—where you have the luxury of installing it on five Macs at a time.

Features

The biggest feature of Commander One is the built-in FTP file manager. The need for an FTP Manager today is rather limited. In fact, other than web developers, I suspect there are few people who need FTP anymore, or even know what it is. But if you do need it, the concept of having FTP built-in to Finder windows is certainly enticing.

Along with it’s marquee FTP feature, Commander One offers the ability to theme it’s file manager window, access a Processes window (similar to Apple’s own Activity Monitor), a built-in Terminal, various file sorting capabilities, integration with Dropbox and more.

I won’t go into all the features, you can read about them on the website. I gave Commander One a test run for the last two weeks and compiled my thoughts below.

Commander One for Mac

Unfortunately, none of the features found in Commander One work as well as they do in other apps. In my opinion, the entire app feels cobbled together and lacking in polish. For instance, simply hitting the Space bar in Commander One doesn’t invoke Quick Look like it does in the Finder. You actually have to click a button in the toolbar. An app that exists to replace the Finder needs to improve the Finder, not remove great features.

For simple tasks like dual-pane Finder windows, adding global hotkeys, adding legacy-style Finder labels, theming Finder windows, adding a button to view invisible files, auto-resize windows to specific sizes (or just enough to fit file names on the fly) and adding a host of other tweaks and enhancements to the Mac’s standard Finder, I use the excellent XtraFinder app, which has the benefit of being free; though it does require disabling Apple’s SIP (System Integrity Protection) to do so; a problem that brought about headaches for many software developers with the arrival of El Capitan, and ultimately killed the popular Total Finder, a Commander One competitor.

Commander One’s hero feature, an integrated FTP manager, sounds like the one feature that would make Commander One worth paying for. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get the FTP management feature to work with my FTP sites at all. Eltima offered to troubleshoot the problem for me, but I didn’t go through with it because FTP is such a basic thing that I shouldn’t have to—it’s an ftp address, a username and a password. I have two other FTP apps installed, and both work flawlessly with my FTP sites.

Mac Finder integration is key

And that’s really the problem here. Commander One is a separate app that doesn’t integrate with the Finder, or replace it. So launching an app like CyberDuck or Transmit to use FTP services is no different than using Commander One exclusively, really. Almost all of Commander One’s features suffer from this same problem.

If you’re looking to completely replace the Finder, I think Path Finder does a much better job. Unlike Commander One, Path Finder offers a way to completely ‘replace’ the Finder in almost every meaningful way. If you don’t mind using a separate app for adding useful features to a Finder-like environment, ForkLift looks much better, and offers virtually the same feature set., including FTP file management.

If you just want to add some cool and useful features to the existing Finder, I think you’ll find XtraFinder to be an excellent choice.

The basic features of Commander One are free, with the pro features costing $30. Unfortunately, some of the pro features are available with fee apps like XtraFinder, some are already built-in to the Finder, and others are only useful to those with specific use cases.

Ultimately, though, I’m not sure any app can ‘replace’ the Mac’s Finder completely. Running a completely separate Finder-replacement app on top of the Finder seems pointless to me to begin with. As a huge fan of some of Eltima’s other software like Airy, I was disappointed with Commander One. But Commander One does an admirable job for what it is, and I know that there are those that will find the features Commander One offers to be useful. It’s just not for me.

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El Capitan is here http://www.thegraphicmac.com/el-capitan-is-here/ Wed, 30 Sep 2015 17:00:05 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11583 Mac OS X El Capitan

El Capitan is here. Servers will likely be running slow most of the day, so perhaps spend the afternoon backing up your Mac before updating. Or, you can read the obscenely thorough Ars Technica review of El Capitan.

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Enhance OS X’s speech services http://www.thegraphicmac.com/enhance-os-xs-speech-services/ Wed, 23 Sep 2015 13:00:47 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11559 Dictator

If you use Mac OS X’s built-in speech service to read text back to you, you’re going to love this little gem!

Dictator is a free add-on that enhances built-in speech services by adding a progress indicator, a teleprompter (for reading along with the audio if you wish), and control audio with play, pause, and skip forward by sentence or paragraph controls.

To use Dictator, you simply select some text in any Services supported app (pretty much every app), right-click and choose Dictate from the menu.

You can download Dictater here.

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OS X El Capitan beta display brightness fix http://www.thegraphicmac.com/os-x-el-capitan-beta-display-brightness-fix/ http://www.thegraphicmac.com/os-x-el-capitan-beta-display-brightness-fix/#comments Tue, 14 Jul 2015 12:28:32 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11399 If you installed Apple’s latest beta of OS X, El Capitan, you may have noticed the LCD appears to be a bit brighter with less contrast. I didn’t notice a problem until I launched Diablo III and found that it was almost unplayable due to the screen brightness.

El Capitan ambient light

After tinkering, I realized that El Capitan has added an option in the Display preferences that allows your Mac to automatically adjust the display based on ambient light. Turning this option off (unchecking) fixed my screen brightness issue.

Because this is an iMac, in an office where I control the lighting, this is probably optimal. However, I haven’t installed the beta on my MacBook Pro, so I’m not sure if the new feature offers benefits to mobile users.

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Make Spotlight infinitely more useful with this free app http://www.thegraphicmac.com/make-spotlight-infinitely-more-useful-with-this-free-app/ Fri, 12 Jun 2015 15:30:14 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11297 Flashlight for Spotlight

Search the web, save a note, add a reminder, or do over 200 other things just by typing in the Spotlight box (Command + Space). There are dedicated apps that do a lot of this, but they can be complicated.

Flashlight is simple to use and offers plenty of pre-built plugins to download, including: setting reminders, sending emails (including adding attachments), check the weather, add a calendar event, place Lorem Ipsum text, show hidden system files, and much more. You can also write your own plugins if you wish.

Flashlight is free, and requires Mac OS X Yosemite.

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How to use the Apple Watch font in Mac OS X Yosemite right now http://www.thegraphicmac.com/how-to-use-the-apple-watch-font-in-mac-os-x-yosemite-right-now/ Thu, 21 May 2015 15:30:21 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11268 Rumor has it that Apple will be switching the default system fault from Helvetica Neue to their own proprietary SanFrancisco font, currently used on the Apple Watch, with the next Mac OS X Yosemite update.

SanFrancisco font for Yosemite

If you love tinkering with your Mac, you can download the SanFrancisco font (direct link) and place the font files in your /Library/Fonts (that’s the Library folder at the top level of your Mac’s storage drive, not the one in your Users or System folder). Now log out and log back in to your Mac to activate the new font system-wide.

I recently installed SanFrancisco font as the default and I love it. I’ve also used other Yosemite font replacements like Fira, Source Sans, Input Sans, and even the old OS X Mavericks default, Lucida Grande.

You can patch any font you wish to be a system replacement font yourself. Unfortunately, it requires some geeky wet-work with the Terminal.

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Solve the age-old question of “What’s filling up my storage drive?” http://www.thegraphicmac.com/solve-the-age-old-question-of-whats-filling-up-my-storage-drive/ Mon, 11 May 2015 15:00:06 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11241 “What the hell is filling up my hard drive?” It’s a question we all have after a year or so of downloading files and storing work documents on our Macs. A cluttered storage disk can lead to all sorts of problems, not the least of which is making your Mac run slow.

CleverFiles has a fairly new app for Mac OS X that can help you analyze your storage drive and remove large files and folders easily. Disk Cartography maps your drive data and lists the space-hogging files in an easy-to-read list, and allows you to delete the unwanted files/folders with the click of a button.

Upon launching Disk Cartography, it scans your chosen disk and displays a tree-like folder-structure which you can use to evaluate what’s taking up space, as well as where it is on your drive.

Disk Cartography window

You can manually or automatically filter what is shown by setting parameters such as minimum file size, or whether or not to show System files, etc. The minimum file size feature is particularly useful because it allows you to view your file folder list without the thousands of files taking up so little space that it’s not worth seeing. You can see an example in the image above. Those “Filtered Objects” folders contain all the files on my drive that don’t meet my minimum filter requirements of a minimum of 128MB in size.

Scanning my drive took only a few minutes, and the app displays the data in a clear and simple interface. I also liked that I can right-click on a file or folder to ‘show it in the Finder.’

Disk Cartography isn’t the only app out there that does this, and it certainly doesn’t have the most luscious user interface of them. But I like the simplicity of the app.

There is no dedicated web page for Disk Cartography as of this writing, but you can buy it directly from the Mac App Store here.

You can grab your copy for $1.99 until May 18th when the promo ends.

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