Sticking with LaunchBar

To the LaunchBar vs Quicksilver debate I’ve got an answer: I’m sticking with LaunchBar.

During the last 3 years I’ve used Quicksilver, LaunchBar 4, Google Quick Search Box and now LaunchBar 5.

Right after I got my Mac people started suggesting I use Quicksilver and sure enough I fell in love with it. I had never had a power tool like it when I used Windows and it changed the way I used computers. The idea of having everything just a keystroke away was great.

After some months passed I stumbled in a blog somewhere the suggestion of using LaunchBar (I think it was this post in Alex King’s blog). So I tried it out and was amazed at how fast it was. Then GQS launched and I tried that for some months. It was OK, and it was from Google, but after a while I had to admit I was not enjoying it as I had enjoyed Quicksilver or LaunchBar.

I went back to Quicksilver stuck with it. I was just used to it.

After I upgraded to Snow Leopard I discovered I had to update my Quicksilver with a beta update that was released. During those frustrating days of issues with Snow Leopard I remembered LaunchBar and downloaded the new and improved version 5.

Shit was it good! I had forgotten how fast it was. If you’re a Quicksilver user you might ask yourself “What do you mean fast? Quicksilver’s fast”. No it’s not once you’ve tried LaunchBar. It’s lightning fast. There’s no delay either in launching after invoking it, no delay in searching and basically no delay in anything.

So here’s what you’ll get from it:

Speed. Compared to GQS and Quicksilver it’s fast as hell. Anything you can do anywhere else, LaunchBar will do faster.

Great Indexing. I don’t care how they do it but LaunchBar seems to get indexing just right. I’ve never stumbled with the issue of not being able to find the file I’m looking for. I remember using Quicksilver that I had to develop searching skills. Not here. I just works.

Clipboard history. I know Quicksilver has a clipboard plugin. I used it. But LaunchBar has a built-in clipboard manager that rocks. I created custom shortcuts and I can invoke both my complete clipboard history or an instant insertion of a recent clipboard item. (One thing I wish though, is being able to hold more than 40 history items, which is LaunchBar’s maximum).

Quitting, Selecting and Launching Apps. LaunchBar doesn’t just let you launch an app quickly. It’s got shortcuts to easily move from one app to the other, selecting the one you want (just as with Command-Tab) and will also let you quit an app right from the running apps list.

That’s not all it’s got. It’s got tons of features, but these are the most I’m enjoying lately.

Give yourself a treat. At least try it. It’s better than the rest.

(Oh and I’m not affiliated with the guys at Obdev. It would be cool though, I’d probably have a bit more cash.)

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