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Resolutionator 1.0 (Size: 3.1 MB)
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Name: Resolutionator
Version: 1.0 Mac Platform: Intel Includes: Pre-K'ed OS version: OS X 10.8 or later Processor type(s) & speed: 64-bit processor Block connections to: manytricks.com Courtesy of LfSCrew Release Date: August 3, 2015 New Release! Full Release Notes: http://manytricks.com/resolutionator/releasenotes/ More Info: http://manytricks.com/resolutionator/ Resolutionator Embiggen your display Change resolutions faster than a T-1000 changes shapes! Resolutionator makes it simple to use any of your display's available resolutions. Need more space for a project? A quick click of a menu bar icon—or press of a keyboard shortcut—lets you easily switch to any available resolution. No more time-consuming trips through System Preferences. Switch via the menu bar If you're a menu bar utility person, Resolutionator's pre-set for your preferences: It ships in menu bar mode, giving you quick mouse fling-and-click access to all your resolutions. If you've got multiple displays, you can access all of them through the same menu, as seen in the screenshot. Contrast that with the Displays System Preferences panel method, which requires mousing to each display to change its resolution. Switch via the keyboard If you prefer the keyboard, assign a hot key of your choosing and switch resolutions via this handy pop-up panel: It may appear you can only switch resolutions on one display, but fear not! Tap the left arrow to reveal all attached displays; you can then change the resolution on any of them from that same panel. See even more pixels Depending on your display, OS X may offer three to five resolution choices; these are the choices you'll see by default in Resolutionator. If that's not enough for you, though, Resolutionator can show all the resolutions your display reports it's capable of producing, as seen in the movie at right. Just tell Resolutionator to show non-retina and/or silly resolutions in its preferences, and you'll see—depending on your display's capabilities—many more available resolutions. In particular, enabling silly resolutions will show some resolutions that are greater than the number of pixels on your display. How does this magic work? OS X itself handles the task, scaling everything down to achieve the chosen resolution. You may not need silly resolutions often, but they can be a great help when looking at a page layout on an 11" MacBook Air, for example. Sharing Widget |