Many developers do not ever touch anything mac, do not use IDEs other than Emacs or VIM, do not care about browsers, etc.
So a title is extremely misleading. For a large proportion of the developers most of the listed tools are pretty useless.
And not to mention that "most open source tools and frameworks were developed for OSX, then ported to Windows or Linux" is very far from being correct anywhere outside of the tiny web-development world.
Besides git or mercurial, there is no single set of tools which can be universally usable across the developers' profiles range. There is a huge diversity of needs, cultures and methodologies out there.
Thanks for your feedback. I have no quantitative evidence to back up this statement so I will amend it. There are many reasons most developers (certainly in the Bay Area) prefer OSX to Windows or desktop Linux.
How would you feel about: "Macs combine the user-friendliness of Windows with the Unix environment necessary to run most tools and frameworks."
Obviously the initial comment about most developers using macs was pretty dumb but as a mac user, I do use a lot of these things. Maybe it should be titled "tools for new developers using macs"?
I don't use sourcetree, alfred, jumpcut, spectacle, screen hero. I also don't think there's any special dependency of a developer on something like file vault or time machine. In fact, using git and a remote server naturally backs up nearly all I do. Also, not sure why a developer would have a special need for lastpass or incognito mode?
Lastpass would be useful for dealing with multiple password of multiple versions of the product you're working on.
On my team we use Keepass and we can store and easily share passwords for all of our environments.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 17.3 ms ] threadSo a title is extremely misleading. For a large proportion of the developers most of the listed tools are pretty useless.
And not to mention that "most open source tools and frameworks were developed for OSX, then ported to Windows or Linux" is very far from being correct anywhere outside of the tiny web-development world.
What cloud does this guy live on?
How would you feel about: "Macs combine the user-friendliness of Windows with the Unix environment necessary to run most tools and frameworks."
I don't use sourcetree, alfred, jumpcut, spectacle, screen hero. I also don't think there's any special dependency of a developer on something like file vault or time machine. In fact, using git and a remote server naturally backs up nearly all I do. Also, not sure why a developer would have a special need for lastpass or incognito mode?
Ok, so I use SOME of these things. :)
gcc?
http://support.alfredapp.com/features:clipboard