Alfred mac m112/15/2023 UPDATE November 2018: I appreciate the developer’s response, which I received by email (don’t know where to find it here). Disk Xray Lite lacks the visual appeal, but is free and 10-15X faster at scanning large directories (which in my case are not even that large: <90 GB). If you care about that sort of thing (and I understand if you don’t), this is a superb tool, and well worth the price. I’ve used Daisy Disk since early 2013, and it is a delight: visually appealing, and an extremely effective way of finding and removing clutter on your computer, or identifying space hogs that might be candidates for optimizing. Now the minimum required macOS version is High Sierra (10.13). Dropped support of legacy macOS versions: Yosemite (10.10), El Capitan (10.11) and Sierra (10.12). Cloud: Added distinct descriptions of OneDrive accounts, in case you have both business and personal accounts for the same email address. Cloud: Fixed the bug which caused very long scans of Google Drive to fail with authorization error. Cloud: Added support for Dropbox team accounts – now the shared team folders are included into the scanned result. Cloud: Added the separate Scan Cloud button for better discoverability (previously it was located under the Scan Folder button). Fixed display of network disks host names. Added the ability to drag & drop app bundles and packages onto DaisyDisk to be scanned as folders. The expanded state is now remembered for each folder. Added the “Expand “smaller objects”” and the “Always expand “smaller objects”” commands to the Go menu. Added keyboard navigation in the scanned report (yes, finally!) In many cases nearly all hidden space can be revealed. Significantly improved discovery of hidden space by including more system areas into the scan.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |