atadams Posted December 16, 2014 Share Posted December 16, 2014 Colors Dash caniuse.com Servers VMWare Control Link to comment
vitor Posted August 4, 2015 Share Posted August 4, 2015 (edited) Workflow authors: no pimping your own wares; if they're that good, someone else will mention them Alternatively, they may be really good to us not because they really are good, but because they completely match our mental model (after all, we made them). I’m confident most of us try to accomplish both and have some of our own workflows as the ones we use the crap of the most, simply because they fit so well into how we wish them to work. Here’s my third-party list, in no particular order: Movie and TV Show Search, by tone. Does exactly what it says on the tin. Wicked fast to get info, with ratings from many websites. It even made me deprecate one of my own workflows. Searchio!, by deanishe. Search suggestions for different engines right from Alfred? Yes, please. If I open a webpage directly from Alfred, it likely was from here. Wolfram|Alpha, by tyler-eich. No way to access Google instant results from Alfred, anymore, so this is the next best thing. My only complaint is it’s slow as molasses (if it weren’t, I’d use it way more) but that’s Wolfram|Alpha’s fault, not Tyler’s. TerminalFinder by LeEnno (seems to not have a packal account). Opens current Finder/Pathfinder window in Terminal/iTerm and vice-versa I also noticed that apart from myself, deanishe is the user I regularly use more workflows from, so here’s two more: Glosbe Translation. I spend so much time daily writing in english, I sometimes forget equivalent words in my own language. Its blazing fast lookup and variety of results keeps it as my main choice for translations. Packal Search. Not to search for workflows, but to update them. Edited August 13, 2015 by Vítor Link to comment
deanishe Posted August 4, 2015 Author Share Posted August 4, 2015 Alternatively, they may be really good to us not because they really are good, but because they completely match our mental model (after all, we made them). I’m confident most of us try to accomplish both and have some of our own workflows as the ones we use the crap of the most, simply because they fit so well into how we wish them to work. That was the biggest reason for my caveat I use the shit out of my own workflows because I wrote almost every one of them to scratch a personal itch. Of other people's workflows, only your Markdown to BB code and Robin's ssh workflow make my top 10 most used. Even when I find a workflow that is really useful, I often end up re-implementing, or at least hacking it so it fits my needs (a bit) better. Link to comment
stuartcryan Posted August 6, 2015 Share Posted August 6, 2015 Movie and TV Show Search, by tone. Does exactly what it says on the tin. Wicked fast to get info, with ratings from many websites. It even made me deprecate one of my own workflows. That is AWESOME I have been hunting for something similar for ages. #dances Muchos Gracias thec13 1 Link to comment
jyeakley Posted August 7, 2015 Share Posted August 7, 2015 1. Transmit: Awesome workflow for transmit users! 2. AlfredBookmarklet: Great for storing common bookmarklets (website scripting) 3. Jenkins Workflow: I developed it, but I use it all the time to kick off jobs - hope this helps others! 4. Layout: On a lot of people's list. Download the bleeding edge workflow if you are on Yosemite and it will work. 5. Menu Bar Search: Searches current applications menu..very useful 6. Egg Timer: Great for alerts and timers 7. SSH: Nice shortcut...uses SSH config to pre-populate. I use this sometimes when I get lazy Link to comment
jyeakley Posted August 7, 2015 Share Posted August 7, 2015 (edited) I also wrote a JIRA workflow that I haven't released yet that allows searching issues, setting a favorite filter, returning results based on the set filter, and assigning issues, that I use all the time. I am not sure if a lot of people use JIRA, so I have been hesitant to release it, but if there is interest I will expedite. Edited August 7, 2015 by jyeakley jeffsui 1 Link to comment
stuartcryan Posted August 7, 2015 Share Posted August 7, 2015 I also wrote a JIRA workflow that I haven't released yet that allows searching issues, setting a favorite filter, returning results based on the set filter, and assigning issues, that I use all the time. I am not sure if a lot of people use JIRA, so I have been hesitant to release it, but if there is interest I will expedite. OOOh I would be very interested in chatting with you about that as I had been looking at writing something similar (and have already written something for Confluence but unreleased). Will message you directly. thec13 1 Link to comment
Doom Posted August 11, 2015 Share Posted August 11, 2015 (edited) Caniuse - http://www.alfredforum.com/topic/3165-caniuse/ Domainr - http://www.packal.org/workflow/domainr Recent Downloads - http://www.alfredforum.com/topic/3431-recent-downloads-workflow/I use this alot, I renamed it to "dl" and extended it (instead of ${HOME}/Downloads/* it searches for ${HOME}/Downloads/*/*, cause I have folders in my Downloads like JDownloader, Browser, Mail, Telegram, ...) Git Repos - http://www.packal.org/workflow/git-reposFound it today and already love it! Translate - http://www.packal.org/workflow/translateHad many translators but this is my favorite, I don't have to choose any language (from>to) Edited August 19, 2015 by FirePanther Broke da rulez (of the thread)! Link to comment
deanishe Posted August 11, 2015 Author Share Posted August 11, 2015 Hey FirePanther, I removed your own workflows from your post because, as I wrote in the OP (and quoted in your post), this isn't the thread to pimp your own wares. As Vítor astutely noted above, everyone thinks their own workflows are must-haves: that's usually why they wrote them in the first place… Doom 1 Link to comment
vitor Posted August 13, 2015 Share Posted August 13, 2015 Had forgotten about TerminalFinder, so edited my post to reflect that. I use this one a lot but at the same time it always got on my nerves since it always opens a new iTerm tab we have to manually close, even if you had no iTerm window open.This is in part due to known difficulties of calling iTerm from Alfred with the correct behaviour, but since stuartcryan built a solution for the problem, I was able to fix it as well in TerminalFinder and now find it way more pleasant to use. stuartcryan 1 Link to comment
Doom Posted August 19, 2015 Share Posted August 19, 2015 Hey FirePanther, I removed your own workflows from your post because, as I wrote in the OP (and quoted in your post), this isn't the thread to pimp your own wares. As Vítor astutely noted above, everyone thinks their own workflows are must-haves: that's usually why they wrote them in the first place… Ok you're right, I wouldn't create them if I wouldn't need them Didn't read the rules :S Link to comment
deanishe Posted August 25, 2015 Author Share Posted August 25, 2015 (edited) A new workflow that has quickly become a firm favourite: Search OmniFocus. Because it directly accesses OmniFocus's sqlite database files instead of using AppleScript to talk to the application, it's insanely fast. This makes is so much more useful than other OF workflows. Insanely fast. Edited August 25, 2015 by deanishe smarg19 1 Link to comment
ErfahrungenCOM Posted September 3, 2015 Share Posted September 3, 2015 (edited) My favorit workflows: Currency Converter by Florian Pellet -> Multiple currencies convertable. Upload to imgur by Carlos Alberto Sztoltz -> Hotkey upload to imgur. Toggle WiFi by Hwee-Boon Yar -> Turns WiFi on / off or restarts it. Domainr - http://www.packal.org/workflow/domainr Domainr stopped working a long while ago. Do you have a fix? Edited September 3, 2015 by ErfahrungenCOM Florian 1 Link to comment
smarg19 Posted September 4, 2015 Share Posted September 4, 2015 A new workflow that has quickly become a firm favourite: Search OmniFocus. Because it directly accesses OmniFocus's sqlite database files instead of using AppleScript to talk to the application, it's insanely fast. This makes is so much more useful than other OF workflows. Insanely fast. Had actually thought about building something essentially just like this a while back. Thanks for the rec! Link to comment
Benjamski Posted April 24, 2016 Share Posted April 24, 2016 7. I haven't found a good replacement for an Alfred V1.0 workflow which was a super simple alert notification. You typed in "Alert 50:30 Laundry" or something like that and 50 minutes 30 seconds later it would ding loudly and banner "Laundry" Have you tried EggTimer? I use this daily, for everything from reminding myself to time block or setting timers for food in the oven. The syntax is really simple and semantic too: "timer 15 pizza is done!" in 15 minutes a loud ringer goes off and a "pizza is done!" notification pops up. I wouldn't mind being able to change the alarm sound, but the default is loud and abrasive--which is kind of perfect. Link to comment
nikivi Posted July 5, 2016 Share Posted July 5, 2016 (edited) Really love threads like this, would love to hear other people's choices. I even made a repo with all the great stuff I use here : https://github.com/nikitavoloboev/my-mac-os Here are the workflows that I use from it : Searchio (allows me to quickly search Google, Youtube, Wikipedia, Google Images and Maps quickly and with autosuggestions being provided with every query I type. I can quickly press command + caps lock and type anything I want and use the wonderful power of Google to answer any question that I have. Dash (as mentioned before, it allows me to very quickly search through any docset that I have downloaded for anything I want, it allows me to also scope my search for any specific docset that I want to search. I have it binded to left option and caps lock. Github Command Bar (allows me to quickly find any repository that I want, search through Github, go to my current issues, my dashboard and a lot lot more) Stack Overflow (Stack Overflow search from Alfred with autosuggestions, very often I still just use Google to do my search queries but this allows me to more specifically target Stack Overflow and also see the results from the Alfred prompt itself. currentURL (a very simple workflow that simply gets the url of currently active Safari tab and puts it into system clipboard, I use it a lot as I often want to add a link to some list in 2Do or have it be pasted to some text I am writing) Pocket (allows me to quickly save an article I am reading to Pocket for later reading, I can also go through and search any article that I want to read, archive an article that I have read already in the browser but still want to keep in Pocket) Units (if I even am in need to do any kind of conversion, I do it here) Safari Search (use it all the time now, can instantly search through any bookmarks that I have saved in Safari as well as go through my history. The search is instant and very accurate, it also learns from what you usually choose.) Spotify Mini Player (mentioned it briefly above, but this is an absolutely phenomenal tool that allows me to essentially control through the entirety of Spotify client through a quick Alfred prompt) (very powerful workflow) And here is an imgur album of all the workflows that I have and use : https://imgur.com/a/P2S8T Edited July 5, 2016 by nikivi vdesabou 1 Link to comment
altern8tif Posted July 6, 2016 Share Posted July 6, 2016 And here is an imgur album of all the workflows that I have and use : https://imgur.com/a/P2S8T Holy shitcakes! That's a lot of workflows... I suppose the bulk of them are custom workflows that you created? How does one remember all of the shortcuts/commands? Link to comment
deanishe Posted July 7, 2016 Author Share Posted July 7, 2016 nikivi's pretty hardcore. He posted his usage graph somewhere. It's insane. Link to comment
jeffsui Posted July 21, 2016 Share Posted July 21, 2016 OOOh I would be very interested in chatting with you about that as I had been looking at writing something similar (and have already written something for Confluence but unreleased). Will message you directly. Intersting - I wrote a search for BitbucketServer / Stash Link to comment
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