CAN NOT DOWNLOAD: Some probably encounter the following error: This site can’t be reached.A bug that resulted in HistoryHound not recognizing old Mac App Store licenses.The display of the Filters tab in the preferences so it is legible in Mojave’s Dark Mode.Window size and layout problems that occurred when you dragged the center divider all the way to the bottom to hide the web preview.What’s New in HistoryHoundVersion 2.0.1: Note: Now requires OS X 10.9 or later Corrected: If you use multiple browsers, and enjoy being able to find things you know are there, somewhere, it's a worthwhile investment.HistoryHound currently supports Safari, Firefox, Google Chrome, OmniWeb, Opera, iCab, Vivaldi, NetNewsWire and URL Manager Pro.
#HISTORYHOUND TRIAL#
HistoryHound has a 30-day free trial ( download here), and runs $19.95US for a license after that.
#HISTORYHOUND FULL#
The HistoryHound search is great, really great, but there are amazing possibilities when that index becomes part of a full system search (and accessible to mdfind!). One thing I'm begging for, and getting a positive response on, is the ability to publish the full index to Spotlight. I've been emailing quite a bit with Jon, and he's got a lot of further development planned. I also have a complete history of all of my web browsing across all of the browsers I use, dating back up to 60 days (configurable), with user-definable filters to skip the popups and redirect pages.
I've got full-text search of everything I bookmark, no matter where I do it. I'm also pulling all of my tagged bookmarks from Tags, and all of my Evernote web clippings (all via a combination of Ruby, AppleScript and launchd). Jon Gotow, the developer, is considering implementing Delicious bookmarks, but for the time being I'm just curl-ing them into a text file and having HistoryHound go at it. It can scrape URL's out of straight text files, too. You just have to determine how it should be parsed when you add it, and HistoryHound will take over from there. If you have an app which stores bookmarks on the disk or in a file, say a Fluid SSB or something like Webbla, you can add its folder or file to HistoryHound.
The real gold is in the extensible index sources. Search comes in two flavors: a tiny popup panel which can be assigned to a hotkey and provides a list of matches as you type, and a full, Webkit-enabled search window with page previews and a multi-column result list.
Then you can search for exact or fuzzy matches, or with Spotlight-style boolean keywords for any text on the landing page. Not just the bookmarks, though in the background - with a very low footprint - HistoryHound starts indexing the full text of each page. It means being able to bookmark willy-nilly in any browser and know that you'll be able to quickly locate noteworthy sites again, in any application. HistoryHound indexes bookmarks, history and cache from all of your browsers, with presets for Camino, Firefox 2 & 3, Flock, iCab, OmniWeb, Opera, Safari, Shiira and URL Manager Pro. Its hotkey already has its own spot in my muscle memory.
#HISTORYHOUND SOFTWARE#
Clair Software - more famous, probably, for Default Folder X - and have been using it constantly for days. I just picked up the latest version of HistoryHound from St. Today's Friday Favorite is a new one to me, but it's been around for a while.