Gz Reader For Mac

Freeware
macOS
10.3 MB
Mac

3 USB Port & SD/TF Card Reader: Allow you to connect keyboard, mouse, thumb drive to your Mac Pro or windows powered type-C PC. Offers data transfer speed up to 5 Gbps. Built in SD and TF slots easily access files from universal SD card/Micro SD card. SecureZIP for Mac in Reader Mode Enterprise customers who regularly exchange compressed and encrypted data with users on Macintosh OS X may find situations where a partner does not already have SecureZIP for Mac and is unable to open encrypted files they receive.

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More votes needed
Mac

Vienna is an open source freeware Mac OS X RSS reader with support for RSS/Atom feeds, article storage and management via a SQLite database, written in Objective-C and Cocoa.

Vienna has been designed to provide simple newsreading capabilities for non-technical users while still aiming to be as feature rich as commercial newsreaders.

NOTE: Vienna is distributed under the Apache License 2.0.

Features:

  • Subscribe to Atom/RSS news feeds and podcasts.
  • Simple and intuitive user interface.
  • Built-in tabbed browser.
  • Smart folders for organising related feed articles.
  • Custom article display styles.
  • Three separate reading layouts.
  • Blogging integration.
  • Filter the displayed articles.
  • Manual reordering of the subscription list.
  • Full AppleScript support.
  • Localized into several languages.

What's New:

Adobe Reader For Mac

  • Fix crash on startup on Mac OS X 10.9 and 10.10
  • Changed file extension for binaries upload to tar.gz (instead of .tgz) as Github's user interface got picky again

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Samantha: You wrote that reply rather late, I wrote that comment a long time ago. How you interpret my comment and its tone is your opinion. I hear what you're saying, and I do understand your point. I give you this: Off course I didn't want to be a big happy smile when replying to a post like that. Personally, I think the most of what I wrote was kind of on-topic and related to his problem/disappointment with the application. Sure, my comment did contain some sense of humor (at least I tried)... Call it irony. Did you _not_ think I was suggesting a likely answer to why his files didn't get smaller by using GUI Tar? I think I did. Thirrouard obviously got the point (the part about me being aggressive was axeggarated, though ;-) I feel quite calm). I wasn't rude without reasons. This is a free app. Some guy (or girl) has put a lot of effort, skills and time in making this a nice GUI to the Unix tools -- like tar. --> These tools -- like tar -- is in there, behind the beautiful Mac OS X interface. Go to /Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app, once in the Terminal, write: 'man tar'. All Mac OS X versions have it, deep down. That's the main concern: The Unix tool tar _works_. GUI Tar is like many other apps, only a GraphicalUserInterface for these tools. That means you can't blame this app for bad compression rates on some random (unknown?) files. It is free. It uses free tools to do the job the user wants. Don't blame the developer. That's basically what I wanted to say: Millions of applications are available, free of charge, gratis, free, whatever. Why? Because there are persons who develop great software and makes it available for everybody -- like us -- for free. Personally, I found it very rude to whine about whatever problem you have with an app, which you've obtained for free and which the developer doesn't get a nickel for. Especially when the developer obviously hasn't done anything wrong. --> Take it or leave it. It's free: If you appreciate it, well, show it! If you don't like it, don't immediately start complaining. Greetings, celebritarian - not a developer. ;-)