![]() I’ve heard iTerm is far nicer than the native Terminal, so I use it. ITerm – I use the command line a ton, but only for basic things and things real DevOps people have set up for our team. My favorite feature is the auto-stashing when switching branches. I’d say it quits on me a few times a day. I find it nice for jumping around projects, cutting and merging branches, picking out files for commits… it suites my style. Git Tower – I like a GUI for git! I use this for 98% of all Git stuff I do. I use CrossBrowserTesting for all other browser testing. I find it the easiest way to get a faithful mobile look and experience of a site without having to use the real thing. Simulator – I use this iOS simulator (comes with XCode) quite a bit. I’m not sure why I use the Developer Edition and I don’t think I use any particular features of it, but hey, why not. On Desktop I use it the least, but it’s here for testing.Ĭhrome – I do most of my day-to-day browsing and development in Chrome.įirefox Developer Edition – Mostly for testing. Safari – On iOS I use Safari because it’s the only browser that supports that ad blocking stuff. I like the interface though so I keep upgrading it. Mostly grouping fonts into my own categories so I can browse for what I need quickly and shutting off stuff I don’t use very much. So nice to have all this data in one app that also syncs to my other devices.įontExplorerX – I’m not even sure how necessary this is anymore since the native Font Book looks like it can do most of what I use this for. I use pretty much every feature of 1Password. ![]() ![]() I also keep a lot of notes in there of things I want to keep secure. It’s good to figure out so I can kills the task and calm things back down.ġPassword – Essential app for managing passwords. Sometimes it’s some Ruby task freaking out or a Chrome tab doing something super intensive. I often pop open Activity Monitor and sort by CPU usage and figure out what it is. The AppsĪctivity Monitor – Sometimes my laptop fans start going crazy and everything gets slow. The spaces are added by using this old trick. I also just a few days into having a really wide 34″ LG monitor, so my Dock is large-and-in-charge right now: See in new tab I bet this changes quite a bit over the years, so it will be interesting to re-do this in years to come and see how it changes. I know “Docks” are a little Mac-centric, but feel free to share your most used apps on other platforms as well. I figured that might be a fun thing to share, and y’all can follow suit and share yours as well. You can watch a video review about BetterSnapTool down below and learn more about it.Someone wrote in asking about some icons in my Dock. I paid for this simple application, because I believed it was something that could make it easier for me to resize the windows of my apps, and it really was a good investment that I recommend. I find myself sometimes hesitating to pay for things that can literally have a positive impact on my work and on my life in general, yet I sometimes spend carelessly on things that really do not matter that much. It costs $2.99, but it is worth the money. I personally have not gone a lot in depth with the customization of this tool, but have only been using it to resize the windows of the applications by dragging them in the screen sides, and I am really grateful for it. It supports multiple monitors, hidden docks, change the design of the preview overlays, and even set application specific snapping sizes, and also select what happens when you double-click a window’s title-bar. It also allows you to move or resize the window below the cursor while holding customizable modifier keys. You can also this app to customize what happens after right-clicking on one of the buttons on the top left of a window. It also gives you the ability to do the resize using keyboard shortcuts, and also setting custom sizes that you may need. It allows you to resize your applications’ windows simply by dragging them to the top, left, or right side of the screen, and see them immediately resized. Fortunately, I saw Noah Kagan recommending a cheap app called BetterSnapTool, which allows you to do just that.īetterSnapTool is a really simple utility that runs in the background, but that can have a really beneficial impact in your workflow. One of them was the ability to resize the windows of applications by dragging them to one of the screen’s corners. A couple of months ago, I switched to Mac OS and a few features that I really enjoyed having in Windows were not in this new OS. For a very long time, I have used Windows as my default operating system.
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