Sublime Text 3 is by far my preferred software when it comes to code editing, it doesn’t do much out of the box, but what it does, it does well. However one day, v4 will be discontinued, and migrating those favourites to another client with panics propriatary encryption will be a cumbersome nightmare… Guess security is a good thing after all. I’ll admit, this one is one of the few i’m using that is not cross-platform compatible. The above screenshot it not my own, locally I have around 200’ish sites configured, transmit handles them all well. FTP Client (Transmit 4)ĭespite that panic decided to prematurely and utterly screw up transmit 5 with flashy icons and “features”, the older version still does a handy job of transferring my files, without too many hiccups. I’ll walk through the alternatives I use for windows later in this post. Mac OS X (Sierra) preferred setupįor anything strictly work related I will always, any given time prefer OS X over windows (Linux mint if given the choice.) solely because of all my påreffered langauges have been written for a *nix environment with a lot more compatibility to everything else. – Being leightweight, have good performance, I don’t want my FTP client hogging 80% CPU just to upload 10+ GB of files.Īdditionally, every piece of software should come with sensible default settings configured, I don’t want to spend 2-3 hours changing every setting across all programs, everytime i switch to a new operating system installation. ![]() – Come with the absolutely bare minimum of features (That means no bloatware!) – Have an intuitive set of default hotkeys, – The quality and condition of being plain or natural, easy to use and understand I set very high demands for the software I chose to use, included but not limited to. If you want a clipboard manager and history for Mac, then check out and download ClipMenu, set it to launch at Login, and never lose another copied item to the clipboard again.So the other day, I was asked “Allan what’s your setup like?” by a new colleague, and the next thing i know is, I’ve spent a good hour discussing and explaining my setup, and how it’s all configured.įor a fact, I have slightly different setups depending on the operating system I’m using. Download ClipMenu for free – compatible with Mac OS X Snow Leopard, Lion, and newer. ![]() If there is a better clipboard manager for Mac OS X, I haven’t seen it. ![]() It even works fine with the command line pbcopy and pbpaste tools. The ClipMenu app also supports saving “Snippets” of data that you use or access frequently for pasting, these are stored outside of the standard clipboard history and can be also be retrieved by a keyboard shortcut.ĬlipMenu is powerful yet easy to use, and surprisingly customizable, right down to the menubar icon itself. Hit the key combo and a contextual menu will pop up anywhere the mouse is located. Rather not add another menu item to Mac OS X? No problem, you can have ClipMenu enabled but the menu hidden, instead opting for the history manager to be accessible via a keyboard shortcut instead (default is Command+Shift+V). ![]() Just select an item from the menu and it gets copied into your active clipboard buffer ready to be pasted or used elsewhere. ClipMenu defaults to remember 20 items but can be set to whatever you want, each clipboard item is then stored for easy retrieval from the menu.
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