Monday, May 26, 2008

Sticky Windows 2.4.1


Sticky Windows is an application for Mac OS X which extends the tab browsing experience to the Desktop.

Sticky Windows shrinks your windows into tabs when you drag a window towards the edge of your screen, providing you with a completely clutter-free workspace. By clicking on the tab the user can show and hide the window.

The tab can be created by dragging a window to any edge of the screen (Sticky Windows also supports multiple screens). When the mouse reaches the margin of the screen a tab will appear.

To remove a tab, simply drag it away from the screen edge. If the window is not currently visible when the tab is dismissed, the original window is re-displayed on the screen.

What’s new in version 2.4?

- Sticky Windows is now fully compatible with Leopard (Mac OS X 10.5)
- Compatibility with Spaces added
- Compatibility with Leopard’s System Preferences added
- Performance improvements on machines with slow graphic cards

Developer Note

Microsoft Office documents still have a hard time becoming “Sticky Windows”. However manual tabs works, and we are currently working on a solution to make automatic tabs compatible too.

How does it work?

Sticky Windows keeps track of all the windows which are visualized on the Desktop, as soon as the user drag a window, and the mouse reaches the edge of the screen, Sticky Windows shows a tab corresponding to that window. Afterwards Sticky Windows “takes care” of the window and communicates to the Windows Server to show and hide it.

Is Sticky Windows CPU heavy application?

Sticky Windows has been designed to be light in CPU usage. You will seldom see it using more than 1% of your CPU. This is particular important for Powerbook/MacBook users that will be able to use it without worrying that it will drain their batteries.


http://rapidshare.com/files/119796668/StickyWindows2.4.1.zip

OR

http://depositfiles.com/files/5776214


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