If you’re a Mac user, sometimes you can feel like the operating system is too
simplistic. Work professionally and you can feel like that, although it looks
great, there was too much emphasis placed on making the user-interface
accessible to newbies, rather than concentrating on power for the advanced Mac
user.
Apart from security tools, on the Windows operating system there are more
tweaking, optimisation, defrag and boost tools than anything else. However,
there are also superb Explorer replacement tools such as
Directory Opus,
Xplorer and Total
Commander. These enable you to work with your files far more easily than the
standard Explorer. Leopard ships with a new Finder, but some of these new
features are ‘glossy’ features, such as the cover flow approach to browsing
folder contents.
ForkLift is a fantastic new Finder tool for your Mac that enables you to work
with multiple source/destinations, integrate FTP directly in to the Finder
window and, as it’s built for Leopard, shares some of the new Finder features
that were integrated in to the new OS, such as QuickLook. You can quickly batch
rename a selection of files, create an archive and much more.
Sadly, ForkLift is no way near as powerful as, say,
Directory Opus on
Windows, nor is it a Finder replacement - it doesn’t open when you want to open
a new Finder window. If they could add this facility, it would be a superb tool
for your Mac. At the moment, it’s more of an addition than a replacement.