

As the full documentation above has not been updated since IBrowse 2.3, additional documentation on some of the main new features and changes since then is shown. Transit is good enough to hold on, though, I think. In depth documentation for IBrowse 2.3 is available to view online or download at the link below: > Full IBrowse 2.3 Documentation. Transit? Built-in FTP is supposedly much improved. The images used in the Navigation Toolbar will use a number of pens from the screen palette in order to be displayed. Keyboard Maestro, Key Xing, Hot Keys, QuicKeys X - now keyboard shortcuts can be set, but these apps will still probably offer more. Suitcase, Font Agent? Will Font Book be good enough to knock these two out of the water? (Not Font Reserve, I know that.) Or will designers wanting auto-activation still pay Extensis & others?

Ibrowse uywam w wersji demo, ale to chyba nie powinno mie znaczenia. Clair ($35) - new Open & Save dialogs gently put D.F. W ibrowse zminiem gdzie tylko si dao czcionki na pl (np. LiteSwitch, Proteron ($15) - now in the OS: command-tabbing in load order, in a shaded window the center of the screenĪddressix, A-Sharp ($13) - mailing labels from Address Book, now handled by Address Book, and even w/ printing to AveryĬlassic Spy (free) - menu extra for Classic now provided, with some nice improvementsįaxSTF X, Smith Micro ($90) Page Sender, Smile Software ($30) - nullified (thankfully, in the case of FaxSTF!) by fax capibilities built into the OSĭefault Folder X, St. Still, just for kicks, a morbid little list. So what small 3rd party utilities, from the looks of Panther DP1, did Apple render practically obsolete? It's dangerous territory for these folks, we all know that.
