![]() ![]() ![]() That is not a big price to pay, especially when you consider fman is still being developed and expanding its feature set with every version. Paying $12 for each following year will keep you updated for future releases. moving directory structures around (like project structures, etc)įor $14 bucks you can buy a license that bears one year of updates.media file management (moving default icons, brand related stuff and images around).cleaning up my downloads and documents folders.I’ve been using it since begin April 2017 and fman has proven to make file handling a lot faster. Did I use it regularly over the past month?Īs a supporting utility, fman does answer my secret desire to gain a neat side-by-side file manager.Can I defend its price tag for continued usage / does it gain me enough (see point 2).Does it save me time, or make me more efficiënt?.supporting utilities (file managing, document editing, screengrabbing, note taking, etc.).developing mobile applications (development IDE’s, source control tools, terminal apps, snippet managers).prototyping and defining a mobile solution (wireframing, mocking, screen designing).the conceptual definition of mobile solutions (architecture, estimations, user story definition, etc.).Does the tool fit into my primary workflows?.Read more about my experiences with fman and why it has a place on my Dock after the break.įor a tool to reign my MBP’s Dock and have a spot on it, there are a couple of checks it has to pass: Important: I am in no way affiliated with fman or the developer behind it, Michael Herrmann It already deserved a prominent place on my Dock. ![]() It helps me to quickly arrange windows on my dual monitor setup. I often find myself mimicking the side-by-side file manager interface because I use BetterSnapTool to arrange two Finder windows alongside each other, both taking 50% of the screen width.īut now I have a worthy tool that gives me the same power and speed improvement on my Mac as Windows Commander! It goes by the name fman, a file manager by Michael Herrmann. On Mac OS I use a window management utility, called BetterSnapTool, for quite some time now. One of the tools that freed a lot of people from remembering directory names and typing a lot of mkdir, copy, and rmdir commands was an awesome file manager called Norton Commander.īecause of the popularity of file management in a side-by-side interface, a similar tool came to the Windows platform in the nineties and zeros, called Windows Commander (now known as Total Commander). If you’re 25+ there’s a good chance you’ve grown up using MS-DOS, Microsoft’s CLI interface to operate your computer. This post is about fman, a side-by-side file manager that is for your Mac what Windows Commander was for Windows. ![]()
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