AppTrap



Note: AppTrap is no longer being maintained or developed by me, please visit this site instead. Thanks for all the support and suggestions in the past! Thanks for all the support and suggestions in the past! There are opinions about AppTrap yet. Similar to AppTrap. Thoroughly uninstall unwanted apps. Take a look inside your iPhone or iPad. Use another Mac or PC as a second monitor. Database that includes every Apple product.

  1. App Trapp Technology
  2. App Traps That Can Steal Your Info
Apptrap mac catalina

AppTrap for Snow Leopard

AppTrap

AppTrap for Snow Leopard is pretty much done. I just need to get my hands on a copy of the OS to do some final testing. If there aren’t any crazy last-minute bugs, it should be released sometime between Friday and early next week, depending on when I get my copy. The current version should work fine on Snow Leopard, so you’ll be OK while I get the next release ready.

The main improvement for the Snow Leopard version of AppTrap, henceforth known as 1.1.1, is 64 bit support. Specifically, 64 bit prefpane support. The change isn’t for the imperceptibly small performance improvement, but for convenience’s sake. Snow Leopard’s System Preferences supports the loading of 32 bit preference panes, but, being a 64 bit application itself, it must restart in order to load them.

Apptrap

It’s akin to a 64 bit application requiring 64 bit plugins. If one of the plugins is 32 bit, then the application will run as a 32 bit process instead of as a 64 bit process. In the case of System Preferences, because it’s already running, it has to quit itself and then restart as a 32 bit process.

1.1.1 will also be dropping support for Tiger. That’s mostly because of the 64 bit-ness. Some of the code I’ve had to change to get AppTrap to compile as 64 bit also requires Leopard.

AppTrap

App Trapp Technology

I’ve tried compiling the background process as 64 bit, and although it compiles, the warnings freak me out just a little. I’d like to learn a bit more before I start to delve into stuff that I’m not as familiar with.

Anyway, this post was longer than I expected it to be. I hope it gave you some clarification on what’s going on with AppTrap. Post in the comments if you have any questions or suggestions, or you can email me. 🙂

App Traps That Can Steal Your Info

AppTrap is a handy and straightforward utility that lets you to rapidly uninstall the associated junk files and applications via simple drag and drop action. You can reduce the Mac OS X uninstallation process to dropping and dragging the apps to the trash. There is a new panel that you can add it to your system preferences window, the next step is to activate the service and open the AppTrap window. This program gives you the possibility to make sure the apps completely removed from your PC at all times. The user can scan the disk for files affiliated with the utility and send an app to the trash each time with the extremely simple functions of this tool. Additionally, it is possible to rapidly delete the files and each detected file comes with a check box. AppTrap is an unobtrusive installer uninstaller for Mac that you can manage the service status with the preferences pane and it comes with a simple prompt window.