![]() Jump – better than Screens 4 as it supports both windows and mac, is cheaper, and 2 protocols plus whole team behind it and more updates released. allows use of mouse, while screens allows iphone as mouse. Tripmode – for working on 3g connections and not waste all data,Įvernote – save any important (or trivial) pieces of information I come across for perusal at a later stage.Ĭhrome – my favorite browser (including many awesome extensions).Ĭheatsheet – Keyboard shortcuts panel for any software on my MacOS devices. Skype – video conversations (masterminds, family, team). Nativefier/Unite – Make Mac apps out of websites I use frequently Things3 – experimenting with this todo list app this year.įreeFileSync – backups to offline drives.Ĭlippings.io – Upload and organise Kindle notes and highlights. Lightshot screenshot – Screenshots and simple annotations. ![]() I use Awesome Screenshot when I want to take a scrolling browser screenshot, which is increasingly rarer these days. Shottr – Screenshot app that can do auto scroll for website screenshots. Slack – real-time communication with my team.ĪccountKiller – an online service that makes it very easy to delete accounts that are no longer wanted. Hostbuddy / Gas Mask – Editing tool for the hosts file on Macs. The Thread Reader App – Unroll Twitter threads.Īlfred – find and open files and apps faster.ĭuet – using the iPad Pro as a third or second monitor. LinkLiar – changing the MAC address on demand. All done through the browser, for free.īoomerang for Gmail – scheduled sending and email reminders.įinal Cut Pro X – used for scrubbing through padel videos to analyse the game.įollowupthen – delaying emails or reminding me about them later (online service not an app per se) Zencastr – recording podcast episodes when we have multiple guests. MailPlane – manage all my Gmail accounts from one app. Strava – Monitoring my cycling and running. VNC Server and Viewer – connecting remotely to my Raspberry Pi. But you can still buy it directly from the developer for a one-time fee starting at $15, and it’s also available for subscribers to SetApp.Scroll Reverser – reversing scrolling directions for my mouse. On the Mac App Store, TripMode is a $12/year subscription. ![]() More interesting still is that, now that there’s an Apple-blessed framework, TripMode qualifies for the Mac App Store! It’s quite a change. It’s interesting to see how Apple’s changes in Big Sur have enabled the new version of TripMode to use an Apple-blessed extensions framework, rather than the kernel extension previously required. It lets you control how your Mac uses data, which is vitally important if you use slow or metered networks. TripMode has long been one of my favorite Mac utilities. For users, it’s a safer way to filter your network traffic. TripMode 3 is entirely based on these Network Extensions. This policy has changed since the newest Network Extensions framework was made available in Big Sur. Sandboxing rules made it clear that apps like TripMode, that require deep integration with the system to work, were not allowed. Before macOS Big Sur came out, Apple didn’t allow network filtering apps on the Mac App Store. TripMode was released almost 6 years ago, after all. ![]() What you may not know is why TripMode wasn’t available on the Mac App Store.
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