iClipboard update works with Spaces feature in Leopard
Posted by Dennis Sellers
Jan 10, 2008 at 11:02am
Chronos LC has updated iClipboard, a clipboard manager for Mac OS X, to version 1.1. In the upgrade, a new empty clipping always appears at the top of the Shelf so users can drag and save new content in iClipboard. A
Clippings can now be cleared on a project-by-project basis. And iClipboard 1.1 works with the Spaces feature of Mac OS X 10.5 (“Leopard”).
According to Robert McCullough, vice president of development at Chronos, “iClipboard records everything copied to the system-wide clipboard so you can go back and paste more than just the last thing you copied. It uses clipboard technology that Chronos developed eight years ago for its note manager product.
Features of iClipboard include unlimited clipboard history, the ability to paste clippings with a single click. An unobtrusive Shelf slides out from the side of the screen and clipboard history can be limited by quantity or time period, McCullough says. The app offers full previews for rich text, image, web, movie, audio, and file clippings, and offers Quick Look previews for file clippings.
With iClipboard you can delete individual clippings (like a password) with a single click and clear the entire clipboard history with a single click. You can ignore clippings larger than a user-specified size and edit text clippings directly from the Shelf. iClipboard supports user-defined sounds for grabbing and pasting clippings. With it you can capture the document, application, and url of a clipping along with the content
iClipboard costs US$29.95, but version 1.1 is a free update for registered users. It requires Mac OS X 10.5 or higher.
Article Information
Comment on this Article Print this Article Email this Article Digg This
Contributor
Dennis Sellers
Dennis has been a newspaper editor/reporter (seven years) and teacher (seven years). He has over 4,000 magazine, newspaper and online articles to his credit. He has also covered the Mac and tech industries for over a decade for such online publications as MacCentral, MacMinute and now MacsimumNews.








