![]() ![]() If your iPhone is on and you ‘ve got DropCopy open, the file will show up there instantly. On the desktop, you select where to place the app ‘s small ‘destination window ‘ (which is just an unobtrusive icon-sized circle) and when you want to transfer a file from the Mac you simply drag it onto that circle. It is incredibly simple to work with the app on both the Mac and the iPhone. Today, I grabbed the latest (free) desktop version of the app, installed it, installed the iPhone app, and was happily transferring files in both directions within 3 minutes. ![]() Luckily, one of the things DropCopy prides itself on is its extreme ease of use. So today I ‘ve been getting re-aquainted with it. Then I ‘d somehow lost touch with this app “ until I saw that recent email I hadn ‘t realized the app was available in the App Store. I had used DropCopy on the iPhone way back in the days before the App Store, and liked it a lot. That ‘s a great deal, for a very slick and useful app “ that lets you very (very!) easily share files between any combination of iPhone, iPod Touches, and Macs (and there ‘s a Windows version coming). Heads-up: our normally $5 file-transfer/clipboard sync app DropCopy will be freeįor one day this Sunday (8/30) to commemorate the release of a new version ofĭropCopy for Mac, optimized for Snow Leopard. I got an email the other day from one of the guys behind DropCopy, the brilliant file-sharing app for iPhone and Mac “ with some very good news on their iPhone app:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |