does this index the disk to do this ? So the filemanager is working with an index rather than the files ? It could be stale ?<p>I haven't found a good file manager for mac since 15 years now. They all just about do the things I need but not good enough. I've never really done the dual pane thing, my favourite gui for file management was Windows XP. Every iteration of explorer since has gotten objectively worse.<p>On mac I don't even bother trying to filemanage. I remote in to a windows machine.<p>I need to be able to get paths and paste paths.<p>for my downloads I just sort by type in list view and delete whatever by type. just do that a few times a year no big deal. I don't understand why we can't have an AI that sorts out the files they half baked 'stacks' onto the desktop, but all that happens is i now have dozens and dozens of stacks which contain dozens and dozens of files.
There's an app called Hazel that does your stack sorting. And you can get paths (copy file populates pasteboard with multiple forms, one of which is the file path) and paste paths easily (I use keyboard shortcut but it's also on the context menu). You can paste paths into goto box or even into file selector to instantly change the directory to the location of the file and select it. There are so many "hidden" things like this throughout macOS that it's worth asking before giving up hope that something might not be possible.
I’m in the same boat, I don’t like Finder (better than Windows Explorer though), nor do I like default macOS files / folders dialogs, and I really dislike drag and drop behavior on macOS<p>I dont understand why we are stuck in stone’s age with filesystems GUI
> and I really dislike drag and drop behavior on macOS<p>In the app you can have a dual pane with two folders side-by-side and select the file(s) you want to move/copy to the other folder and right click or open the command palette to do the operation, so you do not have to drag them (though dragging still works too). It's also possible to cut files with CMD + X and paste them somewhere else with CMD + V.
One thing worth knowing is in the mac file dialogs you can drop a file from finder into these and it will change directory to where that file is.<p>The other thing is in most apps in the title bar there is an icon. Drag <i>that</i> to finder and it saves the file. Kinda Risc os style.
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Why would anyone trust an app from an anonymous source access their whole filesystem with read/write access? Who are you hello@whimfiles.com and where are you from?
Do you have any kind of public AI statement on the ways this product utilizes or is built with generative AI, if any?
First screenshot on the front page has a design issue: text of selected file is in black instead of white.
Just switched from windows to Mac and the rumors are true. Finder is terrible.
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