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Mac OS X  |  System / Utilities  |  Other System / Utilities  |  Drop Drawers X

Drop Drawers X

Drop Drawers X - 1.6.6

floating drawers store text, URLs, pictures, etc.

All Time: (4.7)
This Version: Not rated (0.0)
Current Version: 1.6.6
Release Date: 2005-05-10
License: Commercial
Downloads (this version): 6,252
Downloads (all versions): 33,962
Price: $20.00

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

Drop Drawers is a revolutionary user-interface enhancement which provides floating pull-out, snap-shut drawers on the sides of your screen to store text, URLs, aliases, pictures, sounds, movies and anything else. Information in a drawer can also be worked with. For example, styled text can be edited, applications and folders can be dragged onto, URLs can be opened, pictures can be viewed and sounds and movies can be played.

What's new in this version:

Updated for compatibility with OS X 10.4 (Tiger).

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.4 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.3.9
  • Mac OS X 10.3
  • Mac OS X 10.2
  • Mac OS X 10.1
  • Mac OS X 10.0

Additional Requirements:

  • Mac OS X 10.0 or higher

Screenshots:

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Your Installed Versions:


 

Feedback Summary:

This Version:
Overall Rating: Not rated (0.0) Features: Not rated (0.0) Support: Not rated (0.0)
Ease of Use: Not rated (0.0) Quality / Stability: Not rated (0.0) Price: Not rated (0.0)
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Drop Drawers X CommentaryStill works on Intel and Leopard - Version: 1.6.6, 2/8/2008 12:00AM PST

drtimothyjames
I don't know if you can still buy a license for this, but I hope so. I had read all kinds of reviews that suggested it would not work well with Leopard or Intel Macs, but I just bought both and it works as fine as ever. I realize that DragThing has now taken over this program. And DT is a very decent program; I use it for several things. But DD was always faster for me and provided some configuration and text-pasting options that aren't quite available in DT. (I do honestly love DT and think you should buy it!) Anyway, DD is working just fine on a MacBook Pro with 10.5.1.
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Drop Drawers X Commentarycorrection - Version: 1.6.6, 7/24/2006 07:19AM PST

(1 of 1 users found this comment useful)

humhum
A correction of my last post: it *is* possible to remove the drawers entirely from sight: select tab style "None" in the drawer options (and for convenience, use a key as set up in the main Preferences to show or hide any drawer).

The drawers will still appear, out of the blue, expanding from the screen side.
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Drop Drawers X ReviewOne request - Version: 1.6.6, 7/23/2006 05:08PM PST

(1 of 1 users found this comment useful)

humhum
I have used Drop Drawer for many years now, and utterly depend on it. Apps in various tabs, document types each in a separate tab, text snippets, and: one tab for troubleshooting (the solutions to problems that I always seem to forget when I need them).

One of DD's advantages is that you can actually see the name of the file/folder/app in the drawers; with many rival apps, that is not the case. So if I want to launch one of my Tinderbox-files, or Ulysses-files, I have to go through an additional step in those applications; not so in DD. With long text snippets, you can give them a shorthand name. URL's can directly be loaded, but the snippet can also be pasted in a field elsewhere.

In short, DD works faster and with less clicks than other apps.

The one thing that does bother me, is that it takes screen space, no matter how little. Whenever I enlarge a window to extend to full window size, somthing of that screen is obscured by DD. The scrollbar, mostly. So I have to resize the window manually—and that happens a lot. Even more with my iBook 12". (I have 10-11 drawers).

So my big wish would be, that the drawers could altogether disappear like the dock, or that it gives a signal to the finder not to let windows extend under DD's drawers.

DD has been rock solid over these years, never crashed; highly recommended.
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