It’s our goal to help you find a handful of new apps and to affirm that some of the best from last year are, still, the best at what they do this year. As usual, feel free to add your own favorites in the comments below. Be Focused (Free) Blockchain and cryptocurrency news minus the bullshit. Visit Hard Fork.
CLICK IT Be Focused, formerly Hocus Focus is a focus timer app that allows you to stay on task by breaking large projects into smaller intervals. It’s similar to the Pomodoro System, where you work at the full focus for short bursts, often 20 minutes, but then take a 5-minute break after these bursts. The key difference here though is that you can create the tasks, configure the breaks, and scope your progress throughout the day with some really beautiful visuals. It’s like a focus timer, with the built-in accountability of clearly measured results.
Alfred (Free) Alfred is another oldie-but-goodie that’s like Apple‘s Spotlight, but with far more customization options. You can do a lot with Spotlight, but it still doesn’t hold a candle to the power of Alfred — made even more powerful with an upgrade to Powerpack (about $22). Inside the basic app, though, you can search your Mac, the web, make complex calculations that would typically require a calculator, perform system commands, custom searches, currency conversions, and launch applications. And this doesn’t even begin to cover the app‘s functionality. There’s a reason it’s been on every list of this nature since it launched in 2011. If you’re looking for even more ways to get the most out of Alfred, Lifehacker has a great guide on just this. Reeder 3 (Free) Another of our “classic” favorites, Reeder 3 is getting on in years. Still, though, it’s arguably the best RSS reader on the market. The app brings together numerous subscription services like Feedly, Inoreader, Instapaper and others, or local RSS syncing without the need for a third-party service. It has gesture support, customizable shortcuts, and a number of themes to tweak to your hearts’ content. Also, built-in sharing options with your favorite services (Safari, Buffer, Pocket, Evernote, etc.) leaves you no shortage of ways to share or save your favorite content. Bear (Free) Bear is everything we’d hoped Apple Notes would be. In fact, we wrote a piece stating just that last summer. In short, it’s a Notes alternative that has some great customization options (including several color schemes), markdown support, and an easy tagging system that’s both robust and simple to understand. If you’re looking for a “better” Notes, Bear is it. Hazel 4 ($32) Hazel is a difficult app to describe. At first glance, it doesn’t appear to do much of anything. This, however, is what makes it great. At its core, Hazel is a Mac utility that keeps an eye on any folder in your computer that you tell it to. While hiding in the background, the app performs simple (or even fairly complex) tasks that you tell it to. Whether that’s moving specific file types to another folder, or just clearing off the disaster that has become your Home screen, Hazel does it all, silently, and without you even realizing it’s happening. Take my Screenshots folder. It’s often a mess since I rely on them so often for my work here. Now, Hazel deletes any screenshot from this folder after 24 hours, unless I move it somewhere else on my own
before then. aText ($4.99) If you’re familiar with Text Expander, or text expansion in general, you’ll already know what makes aText great. For a fraction of the price of TextExpander ($4 a month), you get most of the functionality in a simple and lightweight Mac app that just does what it’s supposed to: expand longer strings of text from a simple trigger shortcut. You can now avoid typing birthdays, addresses, your full name, or any other long-ish string of text by applying a shortcut to oft-used text strings. My address, for example, is now just “: add” and “thank you” is just “: ty”. It doesn’t sound like a lot, but imagine the time you’ll save by not having to repeat common text strings. One caveat: don’t download aText from the Mac App Store, as it’s no longer working. The correct version, with a 21-day free trial, is available at the aText website.
Escape 2 ($7.99) Escape is a utility that runs in the background and keeps track of where you’re wasting time. As the App Store page says, spending just one hour a day on social media is equivalent to 45 working days a year. Escape helps you figure out where this time is going and nudges you in the right direction on how to get it back.
CheatSheet (Free) CheatSheet is a simple app that’s indispensable for those looking to make better use of keyboard shortcuts. Each time you hold the CMD key on a Mac, CheatSheet springs into action with a list of shortcuts for the active application. It’s simple and offers few frills, but it does what it’s supposed to very well.
BetterTouchTool ($6.50) BetterTouchTool is an application that, for years, is something Apple should have included in its latest releases of macOS. The app allows users fine-grain control over a number of input types and puts powerful customization options at their fingertips. If you’ve ever wished you could press a button and have it do something other than what it was intended for, this is the app you’re looking for. With BetterTouchTool, you can completely remap Apple input devices, like the Trackpad, Touch Bar, Magic Mouse, and Magic Keyboard. You can remap buttons, add keyboard shortcuts, or change gestures to do, well, just about anything.
Todoist (Free) Todoist is, arguably, the best to-do app for Apple devices. I say arguably because Wunderlist is damn good too. What makes Todoist a better option, for me, is the ability to add tasks in a way that closely resembles natural speech — including adding recurring tasks. For example, typing “take the trash out every Monday” automatically sets a recurring reminder that runs until I stop it. Also nice is the ability to organize your tasks by breaking them down into subtasks, or adding filters, colors, or tags.
Franz (Free) Franz is sort of like the Swiss Army Knife of chat applications. It supports a wide variety of commonly used services — Slack, Messenger, WhatsApp, Skype, etc. — and puts them all in one place. Now rather than opening multiple windows, you can just click to a new tab to start a chat in Messenger while continuing chats in Hangouts, and Discord. Even better, there’s a tab for Gmail too. Franz is a great way to simplify your communication by putting everything in a single application.
TotalSpaces2 ($12) TotalSpaces2, according to its creator, BinaryAge, is the “ultimate grid spaces manager.” As someone who relies on this app daily, I couldn’t agree more. While Apple gives us the tools to create multiple desktops, it doesn’t do a great job of managing or supporting them. Rather than a linear row of Spaces atop your Mission Control window, TotalSpaces2 creates a flexible grid that you can easily navigate with keyboard shortcuts and trackpad gestures. Duet (Free) Duet is a cool app made by ex-Apple engineers that turns your iPad into a secondary display. Simply plug your iPad into any Mac, download the app, and configure the options to best suit your work style. It’s an easy way to squeeze a little extra screen real estate out of your existing tablet.
HazeOver ($1.99) HazeOver is a new app on my radar that’s really been paying dividends in 2018. If you’re like me, it’s rare that you don’t have half a dozen (or more) applications open at once. Where HazeOver excels is in cutting through the clutter by dimming anything behind your active window. It offers most of the perks of working in full-screen, while not losing the functionality to quickly glance at other apps without minimizing the window.
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