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As you some of you may have seen, we recently asked our Twitter and Facebook followers to name their favorite Mac desktop apps of the year so far – thanks again to everyone who sent us suggestions.
After a little in-house brainstorming, we took the decision to add a few apps that were released earlier than 2012, but have become very important in our lives this year. Here’s the full selection we came up with, from blockbusters to hidden gems.
1. Angry Birds Space (Game)
2. Snapseed (Photography)
➤ Snapseed
3. LIMBO (Game)
➤ LIMBO
4. Fantastical (Productivity)
5. Sparrow (Productivity)
➤ Sparrow and Sparrow Lite
6. Coda 2 (Developer tools)
Coda 2 is the latest version of the popular Web editor developed by Panic. Building the all-in-one workstation for web development we already knew, it gained over 100 new features and a new UI. As you may have read, Coda 2 is also finally available on the iPad, alongside its slimmed-down edition Diet Coda.
➤ Coda 2
7. Trickster (Productivity)
The recently-relaunched Trickster helps you find apps and files you have recently used – right from your Mac’s menu bar. You can then drop these into any other application, which makes Trickster a big time saver if you are constantly juggling between windows.
8. Gemini (Utilities)
As its name suggests, Gemini helps you find and remove duplicates on your Mac. As we reported, it can scan any location, though the process might take a while depending on the size of your drives. Still, it is very easy to use, and freeing some precious disk space is well worth the small hassle.
➤ Gemini
9. Moom (Utilities)
➤ Moom
10. Favs (Social networking)
Favs lets you put all your favorites together in one place – no matter if they come from Google Reader, Delicious, Twitter, Facebook or any other social platform you may be using. Favs’ powerful search tool then makes it very easy to search through your synced favorites.
➤ Favs
11. Due (Productivity)
Due is a very complete and fast reminder app, which lets you use natural language to add items to your calendar. However, it remains to be seen whether Mac users who also own an iPhone will still be willing to pay US$9,99 for Due and similar apps once Apple rolls out iOS 6. As you may have read, it will include significant additions to Siri, such as better reminders.
➤ Due
12. BetterSnapTool (Productivity)
Created by the German developer Andreas Hegenberg, BetterSnapTool makes it as easy to move windows around on a Mac as it is with Aero on Windows – as reviewer ‘James Smiley’ puts it, “the one and only feature I’ve ever wanted from Windows 7 to be in Mac OS X!”
13. Skala Preview (Graphics & Design)
Skala Preview is a great tool for app designers working from a Mac – according to our editor Harrison Weber, every iOS designer needs to download it if they want to find out how their creations will look like on the iPhone and the iPad.
14. Flutter (Entertainment)
Flutter uses your webcam to let you stop and start your music and videos by a simple hand gesture. Enabled applications include iTunes, VLC, Spotify and QuickTime – and this is just a start, as the company is still in alpha mode, meaning that other gestures and functionalities could be added in the near future.
➤ Flutter
15. Found (Productivity)
Found is a powerful search tool that lets you browse your hard drives as well as the content you may have stored in the cloud, for instance in Google Drive and Gmail. More importantly, it is very fast, and you can get back to any recently used file by typing a few characters.
➤ Found
16. MusiXmatch (Entertainment)
As we reported when we reviewed its iOS and Android apps, MusiXMatch Lyrics is the world’s largest official lyrics database. Available as an OS X app since last September, it makes it very easy to display lyrics of your songs while they are playing, and to save these into iTunes.
17. Cobook (Productivity)
Cobook is a great contact manager that became the first OS X app to be selected as Apple’s ‘Editor’s Choice’ last May. While it is able to sync with your Mac’s standard Address Book, you can also import contacts from Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
➤ Cobook
18. DragonDrop (Utilities)
DragonDrop is a very focused app; its mission is to “make drag and drop on your Mac much easier.” While this may be a bit limited for US$4.99, think about the number of times you copy, paste, drag and drop content each day – and you may change your mind.
As several of our readers already pointed out, the best OS X app of the year may still have to be released – a reference to the fact that a Retina-ready version of the popular Twitter client Tweetbot will soon land on the Mac.
What are your favorite Mac apps this year? Please share them in the comments, and don’t forget to give a try to our very own Mac app!
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