![]() Final Cut Pro 10.6.8 posted on Aug| under Apple, Application, Video.CleanMyMac X 4.14.1 posted on Aug| under Application, Utilities.Adobe Photoshop 2023 v24.2 U2B posted on Ma| under Adobe, Application, Photography.As usual you can contact me by email on and on Twitter. Thanks to those who have reported bugs and made suggestions. I have fixed the annoying bug where “Icon Hidden” dialog would appear every time at startup if you have the menu bar icon hidden. This is a small update, mainly to fix an issue with PopClip on macOS Sierra. “I’m buying it right now.” - Leo Laporte, MacBreak Weekly What’s New in Version 1.5.6: “I think even Mac traditionalists might be tempted.” - Dan Frakes, MacWorld “an essential part of my workflow … 10/10” - Mac.AppStorm “If you love the tap and copy functionality of iOS and want it on your home computer, PopClip is a simple app that adds similar functionality” - lifehacker “an awesome new utility from Pilotmoon that makes the copy & paste function on your Mac look just like the copy & paste function on your iPhone” - Cult of Mac For that alone, it is worth its asking price.” - The Next Web “PopClip has achieved near perfect integration with Mac OS X and seems like a default feature of the operating system. For an up-to-date list of known incompatible apps, see Please note: PopClip works in most Mac apps, but not in all. More than 100 free extensions are available, including Paste and Match Style, Translate, Send to Evernote, Word Count, Capitalize and much, much more. Select any text to do a web search with those terms, or select a single word to get the dictionary definition. Select a misspelled word, and PopClip offers corrections. If you select text containing a URL, email address or file path, PopClip can open it. Instantly access context-specific actions including copy and paste, plus extensions like Send to Evernote. PopClip appears when you select text with your mouse on your Mac. Once done the app will open up, this is a Gatekeeper bypass for 10.12 Or you can manually install on a lower OS than Sierra. Please note that you will be initially asked to run terminal, just do as it asks and enter your own password for your system. Processor type(s) & speed: 64-bit processor This would solve the Look Up request, along with the Services request.Languages: English, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish ![]() It is designed to make it easy for an Electron app to add OS options into the context menu via some simple configuration. With that in mind, I’d like to recommend implementing this: GitHub - sindresorhus/electron-context-menu: Context menu for your Electron app It’s way faster and doesn’t require switching away from Obsidian. With the Look Up function, clicking the highlighted word brings up the Look Up menu right inline in a large tooltip, with the definition of the selected word already there. It opens empty, and you have to either re-type the word into the Dictionary app, or go back to Obsidian, copy the word, then go back to Dictionary and paste it in. This is considerably less convenient, for one main reason: unless Dictionary is already open, it doesn’t actually open to the definition of the highlighted word. Yes, on Mac, you can highlight a word and then three-finger-tap or force-click (depending on how your trackpad is configured), but that action opens the full Dictionary app from Obsidian. ![]() I’d like to +1 the Look Up menu specifically. I don’t know anything about these implementations!) (I’m answering as a user, not a developer. When you ctrl-click or right click, you can also have access to the Services, but in Bear for example, the available options are different between right-click -> Services and Bear Menu -> Services. But it seems like it is up to each application to decide which tool opens when you do so. The other way is by ctrl-clicking or right-clicking “Look Up”. Another way is through the services menu. There are at least three ways to trigger one or the other implementation. Or, “Look Up” can also open Dictionary.app. In MacOs, “Look Up” either triggers that yellow box, which opens up a floating pop-up tool that can search dictionary, Siri suggestions, and more. ![]() They are two implementations of two similar things. This request seems to be a subset of that more general request for Services. Enabling more of the OS-integrated services and accessibility into the menu and right-click functionality. Short answer: Yes, it’s probably the same request.
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