![]() ![]() Version 3.11.4 also supports importing bookmarks from the Brave browser and improves RSS feed handling for increased compatibility with certain sites, e.g., Google Alerts.ĭEVONsphere Express 1.9.5 and EasyFind 5.0.1 bring compatibility with Apple Silicon Macs too. To help find related web pages, the See Also inspector now uses a page’s keywords. Preview or display a slideshow of selected search results via Quick Look, and find up to 10,000 results with search sets. We are also updating DEVONthink To Go with bug fixes and preparations for the arrival of version 3.0.ĭEVONagent 3.11.4 brings fixes and improvements, including support for Apple Silicon Macs. Here’s some news for DEVONagent, DEVONsphere Express, and EasyFind. Thanks to the folks at DEVONtechnologies for this cool app.With the new Apple Silicon Macs bringing great speed paired with long battery life it’s time for us to update more of our products for Apple’s great new architecture. If you download it directly, you can get a version which will work on Mac OS X 10.5 or higher (PowerPC or Intel), which is good news for folks running older versions of Mac OS X. You can download EasyFind from the Mac App Store or directly from DEVONtechnologies. (Aside: I had even disabled Spotlight for awhile on my Mac, but there are many things which just don't work properly if Spotlight is completely disabled, so I ended up turning it back on and just ignoring it. In fact, I've reassigned my Spotlight Keyboard Shortcut to launch EasyFind instead. I keep Spotlight around for those times when I need it, but in actual practice I rarely even do. That means that it won't be as fast as Spotlight, but on my MacBook Air it is still very quick (the speed will be determined by the number of files you are searching plus the speed of the disk). If you want to change the order of those columns, or if you want to sort your results by any of those columns, you can do that too.ĮasyFind can search for the content of files, but it is not using Spotlight's database, it is actually running the search when you enter it. If you don't want any of those columns, you can turn them off. Of course you get the filename (and you can expand that column to make it wider, I just made it narrow in the screenshot above), but you also get the creation date, the modification date, the size, the kind and location. That's far more control and options than what Spotlight gives you (or at least what Spotlight gives you without resorting to byzantine keywords), but what I really love is what you get in the results of your search. Spotlight only lets you choose "current folder" or "everything" which is almost never what I want. 99% of my searches are for things I know are "somewhere" in my Home, or "somewhere" in my Dropbox. You can also set the scope of the search to be a specific volume/disk, or a specific folder such as your Home folder. You can also specify whether or not the search should be case sensitive, whether it should look in package contents, or include invisible files and folders. Next choose to search for All Words, Any Word, a Phrase, or Unix-Wildcards. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy.ĭown the left-hand side of the window are criteria for searching: Files and Folders, Only Files, Only Folders, or File Contents. ![]()
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