through the sort command using the -f option which tells sort to ignore case (so nvultra gets sorted with the rest of the N apps rather than after Z).the second will delete everything everything from \.app to the end of the line.the first will delete everything from the left margin to the last /.through sed which will apply two filters (each marked with -e):. Note: translating the second find command:įor reference: find /Applications -maxdepth 2 -type d -iname '*.app' -print \ Ideally I would just use Bumpr, but Choosy is still better at this than Bumpr because it can do things such as: “Take all of the links from Twitterrific (which is technically now called ‘Phoenix’) and send them to Link Unshortener which can remove most of the tracking crap that some sites use, and then Link Unshortener sends the final link to my default browser (Choosy) which sends it to the appropriate browser. I use MailMate for my work mail and Fastmail/Fmail for my personal mail (and Mailplane for my mailing lists, etc). But Bumpr will also do the same thing for email links. ³ = Theoretically, Bumpr and Choosy “do the same thing” - send links to different browsers. Brave is also the browser that I use as my “work browser” so if I have a “work account” and “personal account” for the same site, Brave will always be signed into my “work account”. I read somewhere that sync is coming to Brave, but is only currently in the nighty builds, but I haven’t actually used it much. ² = I generally only use the ‘regular’ Brave browser. It also links to some other weather sites, pre-bookmarked to my specific location. The Weather “app” points to the web page for my Netatmo Indoor Outdoor Smart Weather Station (this is the one Jason Snell has mentioned he uses). Also, it defaults to which I always forget to use otherwise. Which I don’t want in my regular browser. The Amazon one has its ‘Favorites’ bar with several bookmarks to things that I often want to check, such as my order status page, or if there is something that I am looking at but not sure I want to buy, I’ll bookmark it and put it on the bookmarks toolbar. It’s easier (IMO) to just have one browser dedicated to that, so if I have to check something in my wife’s email and then follow a link from there to check her Google Account Security Settings, it’s not going to be confused as to who I am. For example, the ones named “Mom” and “Tracey” are browsers where I am signed into accounts as my mom/wife in case they need me to help them with something. The rest are more like “Single Task Browsers”. this command: find /Applications -maxdepth 2 -type d -iname '*.app' -print \ I often find it interesting to see what apps people have installed, so here’s my list, generated by.
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