

If you run apps with lots of open windows, it is pretty much indispensable.
#HYPERDOCK MAC OS X WINDOWS#
It adds Windows Aero-style window previews to the Dock. HyperDock is also nice, if you are not on a recent MacBook with multiple graphics cards. The lack of a real path bar is one of the longest-standing, stupidest oversights in OS X's Finder. If you don't want to use TotalFinder, there is FinderPath, which adds a real, editable path bar to finder windows. It basically lets you alt-tab (or "Command"-Tab, if you will) between windows, not applications. The only penalty for not registering is a "Unregistered Copy" note in the title-bar of the window. Apparently registering is a feel-good thing, mostly. It also supports a dual-pane "Total-Commander" style view, for moving files from one directory to another. ds_store files so if you have "show hidden files" on, they don't show up everywhere. It adds the ability to Cut and Paste files, sort folders separately from files (essential, at least for me), redirects the annoying. The OS X finder is incomplete in some odd and irritating ways.įortunately, there are some add-ons to make the two platforms more similar, and add additional functionality to Finder. I've been through the same situation you are dealing with. If something needs to be used by multiple users on the same Mac, generally store it in /Users/Shared or change the permissions in the alternate place you store them. Don't touch other folders yet (you don't need). One more thing - Fonts, you can put fonts into $HOME/Library/Fonts, or into /Library/Fonts (for all users)įor the start, this is enough. You can make hierarchy here too, as I told once in my older post. You can put them in the another place too and OSX will find and run applications no matter where they are stored. of course, you can make any number of sub-folders in your HOME.Īpplications belong in /Applications or ~/Applications folder.


You got $HOME folder ( represented as ~ which also comes from OSX's unix heritage).
