Mac OS X Preview Demo CD (Mac abandonware from 2001) To date, Macintosh Repository served 1384030 old Mac files, totaling more than 271461.8GB! Register and open a Live Trading Account or Demo Account. Log in to Client Portal using credentials provided in email. Click on the 'Downloads' tab in the menu and select the Mac OS operating system to start downloading the installer. Install, log in, and start trading.
[column width=”740px” padding=”5px”]Family Tree Maker 3 (Family Tree Maker for Mac 3 at its launch) is Ancestry.com’s sequel to Family Tree Maker for Mac 2, with a slight name change. Family Tree Maker is a popular cross-platform app (both OS X and Windows) that supports syncing your genealogy data with Ancestry.com and Ancestry.com’s mobile apps. Files created by FTM3 are compatible with Family Tree Maker 2014 (Windows), and in general, it’s closer to the Windows version than previous releases. Among the new features, are a new family view, hint syncing between platforms, export of family tree branches to new FTM files as well as GEDCOM files, and interface improvements. FTM 3 does support OS X 10.10 Yosemite.
A new guide (pictured to the right), Practical Citation, A Guide to Simply and Safely Recording Sources and Citations by Ben Sayer, has been written for Family Tree Maker 3, has been written by Ben Sayer and is available through Amazon’s Kindle eBooks.[/column] [column width=”200px” padding=”5px”][/column][end_columns]
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Purchase at Amazon.com ($69.99) – Note: Family tree Maker 3 “Deluxe” Edition for Mac comes with a 3 month Ancestry.com subscription, which is a very good deal.[/column][column width=”30%” padding=”10px”]
Purchase at Ancestry.com ($39.99) – Note: comes with 14-day Ancestry.com trial.[/column][column width=”30%” padding=”10px”]
Purchase at Amazon.com ($69.99) – Note: Family tree Maker 3 “Deluxe” Edition for Mac comes with a 3 month Ancestry.com subscription, which is a very good deal.[/column][column width=”30%” padding=”10px”]
Purchase at Ancestry.com ($39.99) – Note: comes with 14-day Ancestry.com trial.[/column][column width=”30%” padding=”10px”]
Family Tree Maker Mac 3 (UK)
Family Tree Maker Mac 3 (Canada)
Family Tree Maker Mac 3 (Australia)
Family Tree Maker 3 (France)
Family Tree Maker 3 (Germany)
Developer/Publisher: | Ancestry.com |
Originally Released: | Late 2013 |
Current Version: | Version 22.2.4 |
Last Updated: | February, 2015 |
Price/Upgrade: | $39.99 ($27.99 upgrade, although it's subject to change). |
Demo/Trial Versions: | None available |
Platforms: | OS X, Windows, Ancestry.com, iOS, Android |
Requirements: | OS X 10.7 or later (Mac App Store) OS X 10.6 or later (Direct from Ancestry.com or Amazon.com) |
OS X 10.10 Yosemite Support: | Yes |
Support Languages: | English |
GEDCOM Support: | Yes |
Unicode GEDCOM (Explanation): | Yes |
LDS Ordinance Support: | Yes |
Web Page/HTML Creation: | Yes (through Ancestry.com) |
iPhoto / Photos Support: | Yes |
New Features: | Files can be shared between Windows/PC and Mac versions of FTM New family view and new/improved charts and reports New tree branch export More organization tools Additional editing options TreeSync has been improved - better synchronization of genealogy data between platforms (including mobile platforms) and Ancestry.com Better handling of duplicate facts (merging) |
Articles & Reviews: | Genealogy Tools (Dec 2013) Mac|Life review |
Other Useful Links: | |
Series History: | Replaces Family Tree Maker for Mac 2 (December 2011) Current series restarted with Family Tree Maker 2010 for Mac (2010) Press Release - April 2010 Press Release from 1997 for Family Tree Maker Deluxe Edition II for Macintosh Family Tree Maker genealogy software on the Mac dates back to the late 1990s, although due to low sales/demand, it was discontinued for over a decade, until 2010. FTM on the PC dates back to 1989. |
Release History: | Version 22.2.4 - February 2015 Version 22.2.3 - Fall 2014 Version 22.2.2 Version 22.2.1 |
Compare directories via diff | 14 comments | Create New Account
Trees Demo Mac Os 11
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I use rsync alot myself to copy files from and to work. Any projects Im currently working on for an extended period of time get their own folder and rsynced between work and home.
Though Im usually good about rsyncing before I leave work or home, I forget occassionally.
So I dont accidentally overwrite any changes - I usually use the -n flag. That does a 'dry run' of rsync showing possible changes without actually making them.
Though Im usually good about rsyncing before I leave work or home, I forget occassionally.
So I dont accidentally overwrite any changes - I usually use the -n flag. That does a 'dry run' of rsync showing possible changes without actually making them.
Some time ago I was looking for a tool to binary-compare two directories too. Diff is a bit of an overkill in this case since I was not interested in the details of differences between the two dir structures, I just wanted to know whether they're the same or not.
I've found only one GUI application that would satisfy my needs, it was Kdiff3. However there's a lot more simple and elegant solution. :-) Start a shell and enter the dir that you want to compare with another, then run a 'find':
cd /path/to/dir1
find . -type f -not -exec cmp {} /path/to/dir2/{} ';' -print
This will print the name of each file that differs between the two directories.
It seems to me that any items uniquely found in dir2 won't be reported by the find command.
make sure to format this command exactly the same and including these: ' ' when needed
find . -type f -not -exec cmp {} /path/to/dir2/{} ';' -print
I really just wanted to thank you and everyone in this thread. Relocating and cleaning up my mothers age old backup folder that is filled with duplicates has been made so much easier.
You have all my grattitudes.
find . -type f -not -exec cmp {} /path/to/dir2/{} ';' -print
I really just wanted to thank you and everyone in this thread. Relocating and cleaning up my mothers age old backup folder that is filled with duplicates has been made so much easier.
You have all my grattitudes.
Mac Os Versions
Some people may haven't found the feature, yet, but Toast has a 'Compare' function hidden in the Utilities menu, it'll provide a nice colored output of the differences.
And TextWrangler also supports diffing of folders.
And TextWrangler also supports diffing of folders.
I prefer the use of Subversion to stay in sync with several computers with different OS-es.
There good clients available for OSX like svnX
Blocklock mac os.
There good clients available for OSX like svnX
Blocklock mac os.
I too am trying to keep a desktop and a laptop in sync - both running OSX. Of course the laptop has much less hd space which means I need to be selective. I have been using Unison very successfully so far for documents in general and for certain application preferences. It is very fast and a pleasure to use.
The complications come in due to the fact that applications do not always play nice with copying preferences and the like. For some apps, I haven't figured out which pref and support files are safe to copy. For example, taking a simple-minded approach to syncing causes MS Office to sort of re-install itself each time. Firefox preference copying is also not obvious to me.
Is anyone else sync'ing app preferences and executables?
Also, I am curious how people are using Subversion.
The complications come in due to the fact that applications do not always play nice with copying preferences and the like. For some apps, I haven't figured out which pref and support files are safe to copy. For example, taking a simple-minded approach to syncing causes MS Office to sort of re-install itself each time. Firefox preference copying is also not obvious to me.
Is anyone else sync'ing app preferences and executables?
Also, I am curious how people are using Subversion.
This hint makes me realise I'm not alone in thinking there must be simpler solution to the problem of keeping a directory in sync between work and home computers, without having to lug an external hard drive around. I need to keep a large (about 5GB) directory of pdf files in sync between a work PC and a home Mac, all sorted into appropriate sub-directories. I currently do this manually by copying any changed files onto a flash memory stick and then copying them onto the other machine when I get home. The flash drive is not big enough to contain a copy of the entire directory, but can easily hold just the changed files. Ideally, some little program or script would identify added or changed files, copy them to the flash drive, then put them into the corresponding sub-directory when the flash drive was connected to the other machine. Then it would repeat the process in the opposite direction.
Synchronization utilities are no good as they require a disk big enough to hold the entire directory. Unison is no good as it requires a network connection between the 2 machines (which most admins baulk at).
Anyone have any other ideas?
Synchronization utilities are no good as they require a disk big enough to hold the entire directory. Unison is no good as it requires a network connection between the 2 machines (which most admins baulk at).
Anyone have any other ideas?
I too am trying to keep a desktop and a laptop in sync - both running OSX. Of course the laptop has much less hd space which means I need to be selective. I have been using Unison very successfully so far for documents in general and for certain application preferences. It is very fast and a pleasure to use.
The complications come in due to the fact that applications do not always play nice with copying preferences and the like. For some apps, I haven't figured out which pref and support files are safe to copy. For example, taking a simple-minded approach to syncing causes MS Office to sort of re-install itself each time. Firefox preference copying is also not obvious to me.
Is anyone else sync'ing app preferences and executables?
Also, I am curious how people are using Subversion.
The complications come in due to the fact that applications do not always play nice with copying preferences and the like. For some apps, I haven't figured out which pref and support files are safe to copy. For example, taking a simple-minded approach to syncing causes MS Office to sort of re-install itself each time. Firefox preference copying is also not obvious to me.
Is anyone else sync'ing app preferences and executables?
Also, I am curious how people are using Subversion.
After reading your comment, I found a perl script on CPAN that implements dircmp. The URL is.
http://search.cpan.org/~schulte/File-Dircmp-1.30/Dircmp.pm
I have not tried it, though.
-Mark
http://search.cpan.org/~schulte/File-Dircmp-1.30/Dircmp.pm
I have not tried it, though.
-Mark
I have a question about this hint.. I'm not too well versed in terminal, but I'd love to do this with my two music folders (one on my external HD,and one on my internal). Do I put all of that code into terminal (including the '|'s) in one line, or do I run them as three separate commands in succession?
Also, where does this diffs.txt show up?
Thanks! Ld-47-disasteroids mac os.
Also, where does this diffs.txt show up?
Thanks! Ld-47-disasteroids mac os.
Put it all on one line. The diff.txt file will show up in your working directory. If you just started terminal and did not change directories, this will be your home directory (i.e., not the Desktop or Document directories).
One tip: to quickly enter the two folders you want compare, first type the diff -rq command. Then drag-and-drop the first folder onto the terminal. The path will automatically appear. Then drag-and-drop the second folder. Then type the rest of the command.
One tip: to quickly enter the two folders you want compare, first type the diff -rq command. Then drag-and-drop the first folder onto the terminal. The path will automatically appear. Then drag-and-drop the second folder. Then type the rest of the command.
Users trying to sync home directories between two computers (say a laptop and a desktop) may find Apple's Portable Home Directory feature of Mac OS X Server helpful. I haven't used it, so I can't say how well it works.