Easyfind mac review11/9/2023 One of the biggest takeaways from Federico’s review is that iOS 17 is the update that truly takes widgets to the next level. Which, again, given the circumstances, is absolutely fine with me. Of the two, iPadOS is the one that suffered from lack of development resources the most and whose strategy could be easily summed up as “it’s iPadOS 16, but we fixed Stage Manager”. iOS and iPadOS 17 may not have an industry-defining, obvious tentpole feature, but in their approach to offering miscellaneous improvements, they’re fun and interesting to cover. IOS and iPadOS take a bit of a secondary role in 2023, happily conceding the spotlight to a new software platform that hasn’t launched yet, but which developers around the world are already testing in person. This year, Federico ponders: “In the year when the vision is elsewhere, what do you get the OS that has everything?”Īs it turns out, iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 contain what Federico describes as “a little bit of everything for everyone.” Thanks to the folks at DEVONtechnologies for this cool app.Our friend Federico Viticci at MacStories is back at it again with his annual comprehensive review of Apple’s new software updates: iOS 17 and iPadOS 17. ![]() If you download it directly, you can get a version which will work on Mac OS X 10.5 or higher (PowerPC or Intel), which is good news for folks running older versions of Mac OS X. You can download EasyFind from the Mac App Store or directly from DEVONtechnologies. ![]() (Aside: I had even disabled Spotlight for awhile on my Mac, but there are many things which just don't work properly if Spotlight is completely disabled, so I ended up turning it back on and just ignoring it. In fact, I've reassigned my Spotlight Keyboard Shortcut to launch EasyFind instead. I keep Spotlight around for those times when I need it, but in actual practice I rarely even do. That means that it won't be as fast as Spotlight, but on my MacBook Air it is still very quick (the speed will be determined by the number of files you are searching plus the speed of the disk). If you want to change the order of those columns, or if you want to sort your results by any of those columns, you can do that too.ĮasyFind can search for the content of files, but it is not using Spotlight's database, it is actually running the search when you enter it. If you don't want any of those columns, you can turn them off. Of course you get the filename (and you can expand that column to make it wider, I just made it narrow in the screenshot above), but you also get the creation date, the modification date, the size, the kind and location. That's far more control and options than what Spotlight gives you (or at least what Spotlight gives you without resorting to byzantine keywords), but what I really love is what you get in the results of your search. Spotlight only lets you choose "current folder" or "everything" which is almost never what I want. 99% of my searches are for things I know are "somewhere" in my Home, or "somewhere" in my Dropbox. You can also set the scope of the search to be a specific volume/disk, or a specific folder such as your Home folder. ![]() You can also specify whether or not the search should be case sensitive, whether it should look in package contents, or include invisible files and folders. Next choose to search for All Words, Any Word, a Phrase, or Unix-Wildcards. Take a minute to see what's available, and just start searching.ĭown the left-hand side of the window are criteria for searching: Files and Folders, Only Files, Only Folders, or File Contents. ![]() Don't let years of Spotlight's simplistic UI overwhelm you options and choices are a good thing. When you launch EasyFind, you will see several options and choices. Compare that to Spotlight, which was a marquee feature of OS X six years ago but never grew into something great. And yes, it's better than Spotlight.ĮasyFind is made by the folks at DEVONtechnologies who are well-known for developing powerful search software DEVONthink, DEVONagent Pro, and DEVONagent Express, which is to say that EasyFind is made by people who know a lot about search. EasyFind is a free application that helps you find files and folders on your Mac.
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