Rdio ($10/month) - The Mac client to the Rdio service is awesome.Fluid (free) - Turn your favorite web apps into real mac apps.
#KEYCASTR ALTERNATIVE UTORRENT#
#KEYCASTR ALTERNATIVE FOR MAC#
![keycastr alternative keycastr alternative](https://brookhong.github.io/assets/images/keycastow.png)
PeepOpen ($12) - A better file CMD-T file opener for TextMate, MacVim, and Xcode.Hopefully TextMate 2 will ship before I'm 40. I like it so much, I stopped using Gmail from the browser. Sparrow ($10) - The best desktop Gmail I've used.Evernote (free) - I use this to take client meeting notes, scan receipts & documents I need to keep, and anything else I think I'll want to refer to later.Easily access your passwords using browser plugins. Keep all of your passwords and secure notes encrypted in one place. 1Password ($40) - Stop using the same password for multiple sites.Special mention goes to QuickSilver and LaunchBar, both of which are fantastic.
![keycastr alternative keycastr alternative](https://www.saashub.com/images/app/screenshots/101/20cc11c063fd/landing-medium.jpg)
(Event more awesome with Powerpack paid addon which gives you file operations, clipboard history, iTunes searching/playing and more). Sort of like Launchy & SlickRun for windows. Alfred (free) - Awesome launcher utility.(if you're going to sign up, consider using my referral link) Dropbox (free) - Painless file sync between computers.These are the must-haves, and are among the first installed on any new machine. In each section, I'll list why I like each app, whether or not it's free or not, and occasionally list some honorable mentions that lost out to another app, however is worth mentioning anyway. Since then I've had plenty of time to find some new gems, retire some old ones, and decided that I should share my list with the world. I posed a list of tools last year when I got my first MacBook Pro. In pure Hanselman-style, I present to you the 2011 Ultimate Tools List for Mac.