

- #Omnifocus coupon code update#
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This week MacSparky is sponsored by TextExpander.
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To learn more, head over to the OmniOutliner website and download the free trial today. I've heard from listeners and readers that use OmniOutliner for all sorts of things, like writing a novel, creating a family tree, or just collecting their thoughts.
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No matter where I am if I think of something I want to add to the next field guide, OmniOutliner is right there waiting for me to update it. The combination of powerful outlining tools with synchronization across all of my devices is a winner for me. I also use it to outline all of my field guides.

I use OmniOutliner to outline contracts and complex legal transactions for my day job. You can share your data between all versions of OmniOutliner, so you always have your outlines available to you. With smart columns, scriptability, custom styles, and templates, you can't go wrong. OmniOutliner combines powerful outlining tools plus a smart, simple interface to allow you to make beautiful outlines that can be as complex as you need them to be and no more than that. This week MacSparky is sponsored by OmniOutliner, the best outliner available for the Mac, iPad, and iPhone. There's no better way to search your Mac.
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If you like it, you can get 20% off with the coupon code MACSPARKY2019 or purchase through this link. With HoudahSpot you can find a needle in a haystack.Īnyway, don't take my word for it, go try out the app. I’ve not found any easier way to laser in on just the files you want. It’s faster than a Finder search, it’s faster than a Spotlight Search, and it’s faster than a Siri search. The thing about HoudahSpot is that with all of that search criteria, it’s just faster. I've used HoudahSpot for years and if you haven't tried it yet, you should. You can even set up templates for repeat searches. Need to find every file that includes the name “bumfuzzle” but also includes the word “cumquat” in the text and was written in 2017? HoudahSpot can do that for you. You can combine these search criteria to drill in quickly and choose which locations HoudahSpot looks in and which locations it ignores. It improves upon Spotlight to let you find files by multiple criteria, like name, text, content kind, author, recipient, and pixel count to name a few. HoudahSpot is like Spotlight, but better in every way. But imagine if there were a group of engineers at Apple that wanted to turn up the Spotlight search a notch or two and had nobody in management to tell them "no". Apple’s Spotlight search is a powerful tool. It works more like a super-clean messaging app than a heavy-duty task manager, and it's better off for it.This week I'm pleased to welcome back HoudahSpot as a sponsor.
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The app is cleaner and simpler than ever, full of white space and hidden menus. It's a complete rewrite and redesign of the app, meant to bring it into 2017 (well, it was originally meant to bring it into 2013, but you gotta keep up). Today, Cultured Code officially launches Things 3.0, an updated version that's been in the works for the better part of five years.

Even if I had hundreds or even thousands of tasks, organized into dozens of projects on different timelines and priority levels, on Things, it all still looked and worked right. Made by Germany-based startup Cultured Code, the app won with design. And if you ever wanted to get everybody heated, all you had to do was bring up the unwinnable debate-our version of "cake or pie?"-and ask which Mac to-do list app is better, Omnifocus or Things? Merlin Mann, Leo Babauta, and Lifehacker were required reading. "Eat the frog!" was an inspirational quote, not worrying nonsense. For a certain set of passionate, persnickety writers and readers, there was nothing so fun as debating the merits of Getting Things Done versus The Eisenhower Method. Productivity blogs were one of the first corners of the internet that ever felt like home to me.
