Station is lightning-fast and has some lovely customization options (I’ve made custom icons for each of my categories, and it looks really sharp). While I miss the tabbed interface of DT, I’ve found sorting my shortcuts into folders within Station is just as easy and intuitive, and took almost no time in getting used to. Station has already proven itself to be a worthy replacement for DT. After searching around for a while, I stumbled across Station and gave it a try-there’s a free trial, so why not? And boy, am I glad I did! The Apple Dock is…well, it’s fine, but DragThing really made things better. I’m still on High Sierra for a number of reasons, but one of the big ones is that my beloved DragThing isn’t making the transition to 64-bit. I’m writing this from my iMac running High Sierra. This design also does away with the need for magnification or shrinking the height of the launch panel so your icons remain one height thus making them more readable. Station also implements scrollbars when a launch panel exceeds the width or height of the screen. With ten levels of folders available, enough space is provided to spread out even the most diverse set of applications and documents. This is useful when switching between tasks like business and spreadsheets to graphics work. Another useful feature of Station is the ability to launch, all at once, the items in a launch folder. For example, one folder can contain work related items and another folder gaming items. Productivity is increased because related items can be grouped together into a single folder. Scalability is greatly increased through logical groupings thus increasing the sheer number of items that can be added to Station without having to shrink the launcher size. With nested folders, you can arrange items in Station in a way that fits your workflow with an uncluttered look and feel. Station is a multilevel launcher that promotes a more natural organization of applications and documents into folders.
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