So you got a new Mac, huh? Lucky! I've been using a Mac as my primary
computer on and off for about 20 years. Here are a
few apps use to get the job done.
1. GIPHY CAPTURE
This is the most straightforward way to make GIFs from video clips or
whatever is happening on your screen. For more advanced GIF creation use GIFBrewery, but for quick-and-dirty stuff GIPHY CAPTURE is a real
treasure.
2. 4K Video Downloader
Maybe this is a niche thing, I'm not sure, but frequently find myself
wanting to download a YouTube video, and 4K Video Downloader makes it
really easy. The app publisher also makes a tool called 4K Stogram for
downloading photos from Instagram, and 4K YouTube to MP3 that does what
it says on the tin.
3. WMail
Google Inbox instead of vanilla Gmail. There are a lot of mail
clients and browser shells to turn Gmail into a desktop app, but I've
never found a good desktop client for Inbox until WMail.
4. Notational Velocity
Notational Velocity makes it really easy to create,
find, and sync my notes. Unlike a lot of apps, Notational Velocity has
an option to both sync with Simplenote, and store notes as plain text
files. I keep my notes folder in iCloud Drive (Dropbox or Google Drive
work just as well) so they're accessible from anywhere and from any app.
Sadly, Notational Velocity is basically abandonware — it's open source,
but not actively maintained — and I fear the day when it will stop
working. I'll keep using it until it does.
5. Byword
One reason I like to keep my notes as plain text files is so I can edit
them in my text editor of choice. When I'm doing longer-form writing and
I want a pretty, distraction-free editor, I open up Byword. I've also
used Byword's Markdown preview to print invoices when I was a
freelancer, because I'll do just about anything to avoid traditional
word processors like Pages and Word.
6. Visual Studio Code
And yet another text editor! Visual Studio Code is slick and extensible.Still do a lot of coding in Vim, but when I want to be lazy and have a
nice point-and-click project view, Visual Studio Code's Vim mode is
totally acceptable.
7. Calca
Guess what? A text editor. But this one is really special.Wish there
were 100 more apps like Calca. It really makes my computer feel like a computer,
you know? Basically, it lets you do math with text instead of a
calculator. There's a small learning curve, but it's great when you have
a math heavy project and you're tired of summing everything up every
time a variable changes.
8. BetterSnapTool
I really like how you can snap windows to different edges of the screen
in Windows, and BetterSnapTool replicates that functionality perfectly.
There are a bunch of great window managers available for Mac, so pick
which one works best for you. I like this one.
9. Rocket
Still not sure about this whole "emoji" thing the kids are talking
about, but the best possible way to add emojis to any message is the
Slack way, where you just type a colon and start typing name of the
emoji and it autocompletes. Rocket makes it so you can type emoji like
that anywhere on your Mac.
source : TheVerge
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