It looked and felt amazing: a quantum leap from the ageing Mac OS, and in a different league from Windows 95. It felt like the future - and over the next 15 years it evolved to become even better. Unfortunately, the time of day is not a monotonic clock. (The monotonic clock exists specifically to avoid all the issues associated with a time-of-day clock, including administrators or NTP changing the time, leap seconds, time zones, etc.) – Dave Pacheco Jan 28 '15 at 23:49. UTC, while based on zero degrees longitude, which passes through the Greenwich Observatory, is based on atomic time and includes leap seconds as they are added to our clock every so often. UTC was used beginning in the mid-twentieth century but became the official standard of world time on January 1, 1972. To support both 32-bit and 64-bit architectures at the same time on Windows and Linux, you can use a run-time check for the architecture and then set the sys.path to reference the correct files. On Mac, the Leap Motion libraries are universal binaries that support both architectures, so.
With Leap you find things based on your natural memory of that file. “Hhmm it was a big photoshop file of a basketball court” or “Something I tagged important” or “A word document somewhere in my documents folder”. With the Finder though, it’s more like “I think it might be called bball.psd and that I put it in the originals folder in images in the Project 29 folder which I think I put in Documents… nope, not there… where did I put it?”
Folders and rigid hierarchies might have made sense back when we had hundreds of files, but we’re now swimming in images, files, movies and other data. That’s where tags come in. Tags are keywords that you assign to a file. This makes it extremely easy to find documents, regardless of their location. Why hunt through an arcane hierarchy of folders and files to find the document we want? Apple’s Finder first came out over 20 years ago and we think it’s time for a new approach to finding, organizing and browsing your most important documents.
Leap 4 has been updated to work with the latest macOS and development is ongoing. If you have used our products in the past, then simply running Leap or Yep will convert all your tags. More information is available here and here. We keep Yep tuned as Apple releases new OS versions.
Our most requested feature is finally here… support for Dark Mode! Whether you’ve been turned to the Dark (Mode) side, or you’re a fan of sticking to the Light, we’ve got you covered. (Requires macOS 10.14+)
Wikipedia defines serendipity as the effect by which one accidentally discovers something fortunate, especially while looking for something else entirely.
Leap’s ability to quickly browse like documents allow you to stumble upon not only the file you were looking for but sometimes an even better one that you weren’t looking for. Leap’s search results show up as beautiful, scalable thumbnails that can be ordered anyway you want.
Use Leap’s loupe tool to inspect the document in perfect detail.
A video from one user explaining how he uses Leap to help manageFinal Cut workflows is at youtube.
Note: If you have already purchased Leap from the Mac App Store, you can contact our support for a discounted upgrade coupon.
(also runs as a demo version)
Download Leap for OS X 10.9 – 10.12