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Mac OS X  |  System / Utilities  |  Disk / File Managers / Uninstallers  |  Default Folder X  |  Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5

Default Folder X

Default Folder X

Enhance open/save dialogs with improved navigation & preview, spotlight tagging.

Version:  4.3.3

   [ Views: 604 ]

Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5

Feedback Type:  Review

Contributed by: mxracinguy Wednesday, November 14 2007 @ 07:01 AM PST

Product Platform: MacOSX

Used Product For: Less than a month

Recommend Product: NO

If you're running Leopard on your Mac, don't bother downloading version 3.06 as it won't work. And I agree that charging $35 for this utility to be damn near insane. Sure, it is a very useful app and one I quiet enjoyed in my OS9 days. But it truly is overpriced for what it does. Unfortunately Apple did absolutely nothing to improve the open/save windows or add some of the functionality that DF does. So I guess I'm back to hoping that Apple with do so with 10.6 as I'm not spending this much money on a simple utility.   
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Comments

5 comments |

Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5 - St. Clair Software

Default Folder X should be working fine under Leopard (it is for a lot of people, including the user below, who first reported that it wasn't, then realized it just needed to be turned back on). If it's not working on your system, please contact support@stclairsoft.com with details about what's going on, and we'll help you get the problem resolved. Support is part of what you're paying for when you purchase DFX.

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Sunday, November 18 2007 @ 10:53 PM PST


Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5 - ill trooper

Truth is, I'm not sure it does run solidly under Leopard.

I love this utility, I've owned it for years now, loathed when it isn't on a machine I'm using, and pushed it on many people who can't understand why I'm so enthusiastic about it, but many of those same people aren't old enough to remember utilities like 'Boomerang' (which handled back in the day what 'Default Folder' does now). It's always been solid and the features are amazing time savers. Well worth the cost.

So when I started getting unusual behavior in the finder after installing 10.5 Leopard, I got worried that it might be one of the two utilities I run: LaunchBar, or Default Folder. I'm running a G5 dual-core with Spaces and Exposé active.

What happens is this: At some point in my computing day, I will save a file from an app to the desktop, or drag an image off of the web to the desktop. Then, when I go to the desktop to retrieve it later on, it's not there. Or rather, it's not visible. If I open a new finder/folder window, use the navigation to show the desktop in list mode, the files are there, safe and sound, but the destop has not redrawn them. At this point, if I attempt to click and drag a visible file on the desktop, the file becomes highlighted but will not move. Then the highlight remains lit although the file doesn't actually appear to be there; that is, if I click or double-click on the highlighted 'ghost' file, it's as if it isn't there.

I can't say for sure that Default Folder is causing this, but if I was asked to guess (although it might be considered an uneducated guess), I would say that something about 10.5, Spaces and Default folder aren't working together. I have the disabled "finder-click" in Default Folder, thinking that might be a good starting point for my trouble-shoot, but it's happening again today.

I can't pinpoint what causes it, but the problems I have don't manifest themselves when I have Default Folder turned off. In the 23 years I've been using macs, this seems like some sort of conflict in the way the desktop and the files on it are drawn by the OS's graphics engine.

Again, I am not casting a finger at Default Folder, but I think it may be part of a conflict occurring on my machine. This based on the following notions: 1) Didn't happen in 10.4, 2) I haven't noticed it happening with DF turned off, and 3) the latest version of DF is from July 10th, meaning it hasn't been updated for the public since long before Leopard was released.

I'm posting this here both for the developer to see, and to see if others might be experiencing something similar. Again, maybe it's my Wacom tablet, my eBay settings, the angle of my monitor, or how I butter my toast. But it's not happening when I reluctantly turn it off.

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Sunday, November 25 2007 @ 12:48 PM PST


Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5 - support168

DFX doesn't do anything to your graphics card or mess with your Desktop - I suspect the problems you're having are due to something else. Finder-click is implemented by simply putting a window on top of the Finder's windows and catching the clicks - no rocket science or horrible mucking around with your system there ;-)

The only possible way that DFX could conceivably cause the problems you're describing is if its preference file is badly corrupted and it's running amok in memory trying to figure out a bunch of scrambled settings. Did you check the Reply to This

Tuesday, December 11 2007 @ 10:36 PM PST


Don't bother if you're running OSX 10.5 - dlaw1

I'm using Leopard & it seems to be working fine. You need to place it in your system preference folder, in other. Click on icon in there & tick on & enable at login. As when you first download it is automatically turned off.
The hot keys seem to work fine also. I have been using default on my old OS & missed it when I upgraded as it makes doing things alot faster.
Hope this helps.

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Monday, November 26 2007 @ 06:22 AM PST


Default Folder 3.0.6 and Leopard - macwzl

No conspicuous problems here with 3.0.6 under Leopard.

2.1 GHz G5 iMac.

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Thursday, December 13 2007 @ 07:21 PM PST