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by miyrepyba1970 2020. 2. 7. 12:42

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Over 4 MILLION downloads worldwide - Thanks for your amazing support!!! Wake Up Time is a handcrafted, simple to use alarm clock. It has everything you need for using an alarm clock on a daily basis. Engadget - 'Simple, effective desktop companion' - Mac App Storm - 'Beautiful and Affordable Alarm App'. Customer Reviews on the Mac App Store. 'Great App!!

Wakes me up all the time!' By Mattsic23 'Best alarm clock' by MarkoMitranic 'Love it (Use it every day)!'

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By Fido488 Important note: Put your Mac to sleep util the alarm time by using our SLEEP HELPER - Click the small 'i' icon to download and install the helper application. Highlighted Features: - Enjoy tons of built-in alarm sounds - Add custom alarm sounds at your choice - Randomize alarm sounds - Customizable alarm snooze time - 24-hour mode - Fade alarm sound volume - Realistic alarm clock that nicely displays the current time and the day of the week - Main Switch button easily and quickly turns alarming on and off - HUD display Let us know about all your feature suggestion, we'd like to know how to improve the next version of Wake Up Time. We're always happy to hear your feedbacks! Contact us at Rocky Sand Studio http://www.rockysandstudio.com. The Dude Mabry, Fantastic and dependable alarm clock I've used this app for years now on a variety of laptops and it's never let me down. It is simple and works just like a traditional physical alarm clock. Like many other reviewers have pointed out, it has an awesome setting to change your system volume during an alarm.

So even if you accidentally leave your volume muted at night, you can still hear a full-blast alarm in the morning. I have not used the additional helper download because I generally require a password on my machines when waking from sleep. Instead, I either disable the screensaver and auto-sleep settings, or use an app like Jiggler to prevent sleep/screensaver lock.

Not customizable For the most part Monity is smooth and pretty, giving useful insights into how your mac is performing. Unfortunately, there is no way to look at my CPU temperature in the “Today” section as an average of each of the four core processors. This is a customizable Family Feud powerpoint game (which now includes a Fast Money round) that you can edit and use for your ministry, class room. Reunion, training meeting, etc. It takes a little know-how to edit it ( View the Youtube TUTORIAL below ) but it’s always a big hit. RocketDock, free and safe download. RocketDock latest version: Highly customizable Mac-style navigation bar for your desktop.

The Dude Mabry, Fantastic and dependable alarm clock I've used this app for years now on a variety of laptops and it's never let me down. It is simple and works just like a traditional physical alarm clock. Like many other reviewers have pointed out, it has an awesome setting to change your system volume during an alarm. So even if you accidentally leave your volume muted at night, you can still hear a full-blast alarm in the morning. I have not used the additional helper download because I generally require a password on my machines when waking from sleep. Instead, I either disable the screensaver and auto-sleep settings, or use an app like Jiggler to prevent sleep/screensaver lock. Drew Hurlstone, Amazingly dependable.

I hate this app with all the passion and dark energy of a thousand dying suns. Ever since I installed it earlier this week, it has not failed to wake me up to run errands at horrible times in the morning where civilized human beings should be dreaming about app updates or something. I want it dead. I use the Demon Rooster setting, and it does indeed crow until the marrow of my bones is quivering with rage before I climb across the room to end its infernal screeching.

Download Customizable For Mac

And go do awake, productive things. Thus said, this means that it does its job well. Kudos to its makers.

That said, I still despise it. But if I LIKED it, it would fail at its one purpose, so take this review as a win. Drew Hurlstone, Amazingly dependable. I hate this app with all the passion and dark energy of a thousand dying suns. Ever since I installed it earlier this week, it has not failed to wake me up to run errands at horrible times in the morning where civilized human beings should be dreaming about app updates or something. I want it dead.

I use the Demon Rooster setting, and it does indeed crow until the marrow of my bones is quivering with rage before I climb across the room to end its infernal screeching. And go do awake, productive things. Thus said, this means that it does its job well. Kudos to its makers. That said, I still despise it. But if I LIKED it, it would fail at its one purpose, so take this review as a win.

Authordrsilva, Just got fired Not sure if it’s a MacOS issue, or if it can be fixed in the app. But I lost my phone recently and resorted to finding an alarm to use on my macbook. I was really late to work two days in a row, because once the screen on my macbook turns off, this alarm ceases to function.

However, whenever I woke up and turned the screen back on, there was the really loud ringing of the alarm. It would have woke me up for sure if it was able to function while the Mac is dimmed. But I’m not rating it one star because I don’t know if it’s an issue on the Mac end. Decent alarm otherwise! Authordrsilva, Just got fired Not sure if it’s a MacOS issue, or if it can be fixed in the app. But I lost my phone recently and resorted to finding an alarm to use on my macbook.

I was really late to work two days in a row, because once the screen on my macbook turns off, this alarm ceases to function. However, whenever I woke up and turned the screen back on, there was the really loud ringing of the alarm. It would have woke me up for sure if it was able to function while the Mac is dimmed. But I’m not rating it one star because I don’t know if it’s an issue on the Mac end. Decent alarm otherwise!

Quick quiz: Do you still have your Dock at the bottom of your desktop (where OS X puts it by default)? Do you still use only the icons that came with the OS? Most of us use OS X’s stock interface elements, arranged as they were out of the box. But you don’t have to use someone else’s workspace. Here’s how some Mac users have customized the Mac’s visual environment.

Move the Dock It has always puzzled me that OS X puts the Dock at the bottom of the screen by default. I like my Dock to be visible all the time, but I also want as much vertical screen space as possible for Web pages and other windows. So I chose Apple - Dock - Position On Right. But then I also used Terminal to enter the commands defaults write com.apple.dock pinning end and (after pressing Return) killall Dock. That anchored the Dock to the lower right corner of the screen, with the Trash on the bottom (where it has been for as long as I’ve been using a Mac, and where it’s an easier target when I’m dragging items to it).

—JOE KISSELL Max the Dock I’ve wholeheartedly embraced the Dock—but I use it very methodically. Only programs I use very regularly—many of them are always running—get permanent spots there. Among other things, this helps me build muscle memory: I know where each app is, so it’s easier to click on or drag items to.

On the right-hand side of the Dock, I keep several frequently accessed folders, including an alias of /Volumes (for browsing drives via hierarchical Dock menus) and a folder containing aliases of my most-frequently accessed files. I’ve customized those folders with ( ), so it’s obvious which one is which. Just to the right of those folders, I put folders for in-progress projects—-this turns the Dock into a sort of to-do list: I can just look down at the Dock to see what’s due.

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Finally, I use ( ) to enhance the Dock’s List-view pop-up menus. —DAN FRAKES Replace the Dock Chris Breen uses James Thomson's DragThing to keep the Desktop uncluttered.I’ve used James Thomson’s $29 instead of the Dock for years. I can place my DragThing palettes anywhere I like, and those palettes can have multiple tabs. I can assign keyboard shortcuts to actions such as launching applications and opening folders, remote drives, and frequently used files. I can also quickly switch applications—and hide everything except the new application’s windows—with a single click.

DragThing has helped me keep my desktop organized: I created an Important Files folder in my Documents folder; in it, I put twelve subfolders that can accommodate just about any kind of file I’d normally leave on the desktop—work files and folders, in-progress projects, podcasts, pictures, audio files, and download archives I want to hang on to. I then created a DragThing palette that contains all these folders, and I configured the utility so those folders would open with a single click. At the end of each day, I file all the items I’ve dropped on the desktop into their respective folders. When I need something from one of them, a single click opens it. Because many of the files I create each day are Macworld-related, I took the additional step of creating an Automator workflow that moves selected files into my Macworld Stuff folder.

I saved that workflow as an application and placed it in my DragThing palette for frequently used folders. To quickly file my Macworld work at the end of the day, I select the files I want to put away, and click on the Automator application; then DragThing files the selected items away. Oh, and DragThing lets me put the Trash on the desktop, where it belongs. —CHRISTOPHER BREEN Augment the Dock I use ( ) in conjunction with the Dock to manage and launch my applications: I put links to almost all of them in Overflow; only my everyday programs go in the Dock. Within Overflow, I separate applications into ten categories: Office, Writing, Audio, Visual, Web, Movies, Games, Money, Utilities, and Dev & UI. This way, I can get to pretty much any program I need in a couple of clicks. CHANDLER Dress up Stacks Gina Trapani uses Yasushi Chida's drawer overlays to differentiate Stacks icons in the Dock.I know some Mac users haven’t taken to Stacks, but I really like this feature—I like having fly-out file menus on the Dock.

The biggest problem for me is that telling which stack is which can be impossible. That’s why I like the drawer-overlay images that Japanese designer created. Download the drawer-icon sets, unzip the archive, and drop the appropriate icon into a folder. Drag and drop that folder onto your Dock to create the stack, and the unique drawer graphic will appear on top. —GINA TRAPANI Customize drive icons When you’ve got your camera’s memory card, a thumb drive, and a FireWire drive mounted on your Mac at the same time, telling them apart isn’t easy—unless they have representative icons. If you want your external drive, for example, to show up as something other than a generic white disk, select it in the Finder and press Command-I to summon its Info pane.

Then switch to your browser and find an online image—perhaps an Amazon.com product shot of your drive, or a drive icon from a site such as —and copy it to your Clipboard. Select the drive’s icon in the Info pane and press Command-V to assign your chosen graphic to the drive. Now the drive will appear on your desktop, on the Dock, and in your Finder with its new icon. —GINA TRAPANI Maximize Spaces Before Leopard, I relied heavily on Expose to switch between my open apps.

But although Expose makes switching between apps convenient, things can get pretty cluttered pretty fast when a lot of apps are open at once. So when Leopard arrived, I decided to give Spaces a try. I grouped applications into six workspaces: 1. Internet Safari, Firefox, iWeb, and Transmit (FTP Client). Contacts/Calendar/Email Address Book, iCal, and Mail. Productivity Pages, Keynote, and Numbers (I’d put Microsoft Office applications here, too, if they integrated better with Spaces.) 4. Audio WaveBurner, Logic Pro, Compressor, iTunes, Garage Band, MainStage, and Soundtrack Pro.

Photos iPhoto and Adobe Photoshop. Video iMovie, iDVD, and HandBrake. The Finder and iChat appear in every space, so they’re always accessible.

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I still use Expose to navigate between apps within a space. To switch between spaces, I set it up so that I can press Option- number or Option- arrow key to navigate.

—EVAN STUMPGES Flexible Spaces Spaces allows me to not only segregate my applications but also have them launch automatically in specific workspaces. For example, I’ve set it up so Mail and Safari open in one space, productivity apps open in another, and iTunes gets a third space to itself. But I let other applications open in whatever space I’m currently working in. For example, I use BBEdit all the time for writing; if I want to write something down while browsing in Safari, I open BBEdit in Safari’s space. Later, I might be reading NetNewsWire news feeds in another space and want to jot down something else; BBEdit is open over in the first space, so I just move my mouse to the top right corner of the screen (the hotspot I’ve assigned to display all spaces, using the Expose preference pane’s Active Screen Corners section) and drag the BBEdit window to the space I’m in. —KIRK MCELHEARN More resources One of the easiest ways to dress up your Desktop is to download and install custom icon sets. Among the best sources:;;;;.

And if you're looking for some inspiration, check out of reader-submitted, thoroughly tricked-out OS X desktops. Most of these screenshots are accompanied by explanations of how the desktops were made.

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—DAN MILLER Want some ideas for customizing your OS X desktop? Check out Lifehacker's Flickr photostream of reader-submitted desktop hacks.