The AppleScript support in NeoFinder allows custom integrations of all kinds. Integration - Offering a tight connection to major productivity tools, such as Adobe Creative Suite, Microsoft Office, Roxio Toast, FileMaker Pro, Apples Spotlight and Finder, and the extensive support of drag&drop into other applications, NeoFinder can support many workflow scenarios. Mobile - Keep your NeoFinder database with you on your iPhone or iPad with the separate NeoFinder for iOS app. Networking - Store your catalog database on a server for access from all Macs in the network, and with the sidekick product abeMeda (was CDWinder for Windows) even from Microsoft Windows. For numerous photo and video formats, fonts, text files, and even audio files, NeoFinder generates thumbnails during cataloging, displaying them in all list and icon views. All these are arranged clearly in the user interface, and can be extensively searched. NeoFinder also edits Adobe XMP data, including keywords. We have added this ability to our NeoFinder DAM tool, and now you can set keywords, ratings, many more text fields, for Affinity Photo and Affinity Designer files.Īs NeoFinder uses the industry standard Adobe XMP for this metadata, other tools can use this data as well.Ĭataloging - NeoFinder catalogs metadata of songs, movies, fonts, and photos, including the MP3-Tags of several audio file formats, EXIF, GPS, and IPTC data of photos. While Affinity might still be busy coding such a DAM, we here at the NeoFinder team had received so many requests for it, that we decided to take matters in our own hands. The ability to add ratings, keywords, descriptions, and more to their precious Affinity Photo files.
#System rrequired for neofinder free
It has the most powerful search engine of the bunch and that is by far the most important feature.The NeoFinder DAM tool can now set keywords, ratings, descriptions and many more text fields for Affinity Photo and Affinity Designer files. A free NeoFinder demo version can be downloaded from the NeoFinder website, the price for new users starts at 29,00 (EUR). I use DiskTracker to catalog all my disks and can quickly find any file going back to the early '90's.ĭiskTracker is dedicated to finding files in Finder-Like fashion, on all your off-line disks.
#System rrequired for neofinder archive
I use Toast for it's Disk Spanning feature, making archive disks and sets that are individually Finder-Readable. If you need to catalog your media then use a dedicated media cataloger. But they all try to add too many features that slow the app down. Tried all the others, DiskCatalogMaker, CDFinder, etc. If you have a lot of archived DVD's, CD's, DVD Ram, MO's, Hard Disks, and, yes, Floppies, then you need this app. Maybe a SnowLeopard shot would be a good idea? It works fine on Snow Leopard on Intel Macs and still works fine on old G3 and G4 Macs running Tiger, as well. Still the best for finding stuff on disk archives. Thus far, my own experiments have NOT resulted in successful export/import into a new program. If the reformatted catalogue is still not compatible with the intended cataloguing program, you'll quickly find out. Be sure to use the correct extension used by the cataloguing program on the reformatted file before attempting to open it. OR a text editor may be able to reformat your database to be compatible with your intended disc cataloguing program. dtc.txt file, then let you export it again into a format that works for your intended 64-bit disc cataloguing program. It's possible that a database program may more accurately import the. If it's not, try importing it into another cataloguing program. dtc.txt file into your intended 64-bit disc cataloguing program.ģ) VERIFY the resulting catalogue is accurate and properly formatted. It still runs fine on macOS 10.14 Mojave! But it won't run on 10.15 because the app is 32-bit.įor transition to a 64-bit disc cataloguing application:ġ) EXPORT your DiskTracker catalogues to text.Ģ) IMPORT the resulting DiskTracker. It's impossible to buy it, despite it being available for download.