

- #Tinkertool sharpness quartz for mac os x#
- #Tinkertool sharpness quartz full size#
- #Tinkertool sharpness quartz download#
- #Tinkertool sharpness quartz free#
If there’s even one thing on the list above you’d like to be able to customise (and I’ve only listed about a quarter of the features), TinkerTool makes it free and easy to have OS X behave the way you want your OS to behave, not Tim Cook. TinkerTool is free so there’s no downside here. For example one could use Dark Mode but exempt the Finder and System Preferences.Ĭontrol save dialogues, screenshots and animations Control TimeMachine dialogues and whether to save docs on iCloud Exempt some system apps from Dark Mode control font smoothing (important for non-Retina screens).

customise fonts for applications and font sizes for the system.not prefer iCloud for saving documents (yes really it’s a default, I don’t use iCloud so I don’t run into this).stop TimeMachine for asking to create backups on every drive you insert.deactivate Dashboard (if it’s always popping up and getting in your way).set Help window free to not sit on top in the foreground.
#Tinkertool sharpness quartz full size#
Personally I find the small open/save dialogues almost useless so I’m happy to have a way to get the normal full size open/save dialogue by default.
#Tinkertool sharpness quartz for mac os x#
#Tinkertool sharpness quartz download#
You must download the version which matches your OS: TinkerTool as it directly works with system preferences is OS specific. Many of the comments at MacUpdate suggest that TinkerTool is not compatible with their OS.

I’ve used TinkerTool and TinkerTool System without adverse incident for over ten years. The other customisation utilities are mostly fly-by-night or built by marketers not engineers. In TinkerTool System it’s easier to break the OS but you’ll be warned several times before you do so. I recommend Bresink’s utilities over anything else as Bresink is dedicated just to these system level tweaking and is very careful to make sure the customisations he includes won’t break your OS. It’s companion TinkerTool System allows a user to easily perform advanced maintenance and is always an inexpensive purchase between €5 and €9. You can count on Marcel Bresink and his team to find and safely share ways to tweak and customize OS X.

TinkerTool offers a consistent interface to tweak OS X hidden preferences for over a decade now across a dozen OS X versions. Almost all of them are rendered redundant by Marcel Bresink’s functionalist TinkerTool and TinkerTool System. There’s a proliferation of Mac OS X system and maintenance customisation utilities. People are obsessed with the latest and greatest and design tricks these days.
