📱

Read on Your E-Reader

Thousands of readers get articles like this delivered straight to their e-reader. Works with Kindle, Boox, and any device that syncs with Google Drive or Dropbox.

Learn More

This is a preview. The full article is published at amerpie.lol.

My Take on Bloom, a Mac File Manager

By Lou PlummerAmerpie by Lou Plummer

∞ My Take on Bloom, a Mac File Manager I've always used a file manager as the center of the way I interact with my computer, much more so than a launcher, dock, or menu-driven UI. I used PathFinder for 17 years before switching to Qspace in 2024. I took advantage of the Black Friday sale on Bloom , a relatively new app, to give it a try. Bloom is a well-designed, affordable app with a lot of promise. It's definitely a tool for advanced users and may be overkill for those who aren't. It's not a Finder clone, so you'll have to reprogram your muscle memory to use it efficiently. The developer is actively adding new features and seems responsive to user feedback. What I Like Multi-pane layouts Speed of file operations Archive view - see inside compressed files without opening them Paste copied images and text as new files Search is better than Spotlight Built-in file operations for image operations, previewing, and renaming files Portal window, a unique and powerful implementation of the shelf concept Wish List Auto-mounting of WebDAV and NFS shares. The hooks into conventional cloud storage options are OK, but this is a power user app, and it should improve support for self-hosted services and European services like Koofr and kDrive. To really stand out from the competition, improving its renaming capabilities (with regex and EXIF awareness) would go a long way. Improvements in dual-pane persistence and the ability to save named workspaces. More powerful tab management - pinned tabs, color-coded tabs, tab groups, keyboard shortcuts for more tab operations Integration with Shortcuts, AppleScript, Service Menu, and the addition of a plugin system that other devs could hook into, like they do with Finder. It wouldn't appeal to me, but I can see the app reaching a larger audience by implementing a Finder compatibility mode that mimics Finder's keyboard shortcuts, viewing modality, and folder opening behavior. If you like this kind of tool, I'd pick up a copy now, for $16. The dev's website says that all future updates will be available to anyone who purchases the app-no subscriptions, no paid updates after a year, or any of that monetization optimization stuff. If you need more features right now and don't want to wait, try Qspace, but keep Bloom in mind.

Preview: ~386 words

Continue reading at Amerpie

Read Full Article

More from Amerpie by Lou Plummer

Subscribe to get new articles from this feed on your e-reader.

View feed

This preview is provided for discovery purposes. Read the full article at amerpie.lol. LibSpace is not affiliated with Amerpie.

My Take on Bloom, a Mac File Manager | Read on Kindle | LibSpace