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Alfred snippets vs typinator
Alfred snippets vs typinator













  1. #Alfred snippets vs typinator software#
  2. #Alfred snippets vs typinator trial#
  3. #Alfred snippets vs typinator free#

That’s a strong return on my investment.There are a million and one different productivity hacks you can incorporate into your lifestyle and your workflow.

alfred snippets vs typinator

Those scripts were written in Perl, and I fully expect to be using them 10-15 years from now. I can only respond that I still regularly use scripts that I wrote 10-15 years ago. You may also be thinking that change is inevitable and that I’m foolish to think that any productivity enhancements I use now will still be useful several years down the line. I certainly wouldn’t recommend that others stay away from Keyboard Maestro, but I’m going to. You may be thinking that I’m too pessimistic, that the productivity increase I’d get with Keyboard Maestro is worth the risk that I’d have to abandon a set of macros years from now. That’s not a situation I want to get into. If I became heavily invested in it and then had to leave it, where would I go and how would I get there? Even if I felt comfortable switching to QuicKeys-and I can’t imagine I would-the conversion of my macros from one system to another would, as best I can tell, have to be done by hand. My snippets are in plist files that are easy to convert to another system.

alfred snippets vs typinator

#Alfred snippets vs typinator software#

4 Similarly, if Smile Software ever ruined TextExpander, I could shift to TypeIt4Me or Typinator pretty easily. But if those things happened-or if the developers made changes to those applications that I just couldn’t live with-I could, without too much disruption, switch to Alfred or the revitalized Quicksilver. The same can be said of Objective Development and LaunchBar. If Red Sweater went out of business tomorrow and FastScripts was never updated again, it would probably stop working in some future version of OS X. I am, frankly, less certain about Apple’s commitment to AppleScript, but I still think it’s a fairly safe language in which to program because of its large user base-Apple may want to dump it, but I don’t think it’ll be able to do so for quite a while, if ever. I feel safe writing scripts in languages like Perl, Python, and Ruby because they’re used by so many people and have large, strong development teams working on their implementations I’m certain they’ll be around for many years to come. It’s different, I think, in the size of its user base and its uniqueness. But I still buy commercial apps and use open source software-how is Keyboard Maestro any different?

#Alfred snippets vs typinator free#

And, despite the claims of open source advocates, free software projects can also be abandoned and fail to get critical updates. Now, obviously, any piece of commercial software can be pulled from the market or become orphaned if it’s developer goes out of business. And there was the halt to Quicksilver development a few years ago that caused many of us to switch to LaunchBar. The other well-known macro program for the Mac, QuicKeys, hasn’t been updated for Lion because one of its lead programmers died and the publisher has had trouble finding a replacement. But as you write more macros, your workflow becomes more dependent on Keyboard Maestro, a niche product that could disappear at any time. It’s distinctly more powerful than FastScripts.

alfred snippets vs typinator

Unlike, say, FastScripts, which simply runs scripts written in AppleScript or bash or Perl or Python or Ruby or whatever, Keyboard Maestro has its own set of commands in which you write your macros-these KM-specific commands are, in fact, what makes Keyboard Maestro useful. The problem, paradoxically, is that it’s too capable. But I don’t think I’ll be turning into a Keyboard Maestro devotee. 1 It’s easy to see why it’s so popular: lots of capability with a clean layout.

#Alfred snippets vs typinator trial#

Last week, I downloaded the Keyboard Maestro trial and started exploring the documentation. (There’s some weird link between Brett and me, like he’s my son from another dimension.) Keyboard Maestro just consumed way too many hours of my life that I haven’t even gotten to yet.















Alfred snippets vs typinator