iTunesCheck is Free program for Mac OS X developed by Eric Hankins
iTunesCheck is a program that I wrote after checking out several other programs and not finding exactly what I wanted. It provides global hot keys for controlling iTunes without switching to it, it provides a hotkeyable floating window that shows the currently playing song, and it provides a hotkey for quickly finding a song without switching to iTunes. Yes, all of these things are, of course, available directly in the iTunes interface. But I reveal it cumbersome to obtain to lash to iTunes equitable to shape out what song is playing. This is faster. What's New: Version 0.8a: Added preference to disable window vitality. Also updated vitality to cement to window fadeout. Added preference to disable splash protection at startup. Added visualizer toggle hot passkey. Added hot passkey to hide/unhide iTunes Added option to obtain more exact increments on quantity control. Added fast front and rewind hot keys. Added option to obtain the info window be continually on. Added album artwork to evince options. Added genre, equalizer, grouping, and comments to evince options. Added frolic button to QuickPlay window so that you can equitable frolic a playlist without having to explore for something in it. Changed delay stretch and arrest frequency sliders to obtain more increments. Fixed larva that wouldn't admit you to stir the info window to a protection other than your primary one. Also fixed up the evince sizing code a large deal. It should be more accurate. Fixed a larva where window borders would only present up formerly. Fixed a dilemma where there was no mode to acquire out of the QuickPlay window if you didn't crave to explore. Escape makes the window leave, immediately. Fixed a larva where auto-display wouldn't let you flee iTunes (iTunesCheck would equitable agape it again). Modularized the hot keys for easy expansion. Along with this comes a unusual hot passkey interface, which I expect is less cluttered.
Broken Alias CM is Free program for Mac OS X developed by pm-Soft
The Finder in OS X has a larva. It cannot show where the earliest of an alias was, if it cannot find the earliest itself. Be it because you equitable copied everything to a unalike computer, or because you discovered this 7 year old alias that doesn't po