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| Product | Relaunch 1.3.9 |
| Rating |
|
| Company | Wired Up And Fired Up |
| Price as rated | $US8 ($A10) |
| OS compatibility | 10.4 (Tiger), 10.5 (Leopard) |
| Processor compatibility | Universal |
If you juggle work all day and find yourself switching from one set of apps to another, you can appreciate Relaunch. The idea is simple: for one project, you need one group of apps, while for another project, you need another group. You can either open each app as you need it, or you can use Relaunch to automatically open an entire set of apps (and even files) for you.
To create a project set, open all desired apps and close what you don’t want in that set. Open specific files you use too, in case Relaunch can auto-open them for you as well. Then, click Relaunch in the menu bar and choose Save Snapshot. Name your project’s snapshot and save it anywhere. (I stash each in my docked project’s folder.) Repeat for each project or set of apps.

Simply
choosing any snapshot opens the associated program so they’re ready for
you. To have Relaunch close all programs as it opens a set, check the
option to ask if you’d like to quit open applications. This creates an
extra step, though, as you have to deal with the questioning dialog
box. As a project’s apps or files change, you can save a new snapshot
to replace the old one.
The opening of specific files is inexact because Relaunch is dependent on AppleScript abilities. Some apps call files while others cannot. Safari, for example, recalls only the top tab. Relaunch’s Help documentation lists files that Relaunch can open.
The other benefit of Relaunch is the Auto Snapshot feature. It’ll track the apps you have open and, upon restart or login, will give you the option to reopen previously running apps. That can be a great time-saver.
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[Deborah Shadovitz is a Web designer and the author of Adobe GoLive 5 Bible (IDG Books, 2001). She also penned Mac Design’s GoLive column, and was a contributor to SBS Design.]
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