Today marks a milestone in Many Tricks’ history: the release of Lioness, our first app targeted at Lion, the next version of Mac OS X. (Technical details: Lioness isn’t really released in final form today, but in public beta form. That’s because Lioness is a Lion application, and Lion isn’t out yet.)
So what is Lioness, and why should you want it?
In case you weren’t aware, Lion will allow applications to auto-save their data at regular intervals, making repeated use of Command-S unnecessary. But Mac users have been forcing themselves to press Command-S over and over for decades, so we figured we’d take advantage of that muscle memory by creating a set of useful functions around Command-S.
Under Lion, Lioness will intercept those potentially-worthless Command-S keystrokes, and do the following: auto-save the frontmost document, copy the autosave document to any number of online backup sources, and display a Growl alert noting how much potential data loss you’ve averted by pressing Command-S.
More details can be found on the Lioness page, where you can also download the free public beta. Final Lioness pricing has not yet been set.
Many Tricks


In mouse mode, Moom’s interface appears when your mouse enters a window’s green zoom button; click the desired window size/position, and the window moves there. Change your mind? Hover over the green button again, and click the arrow to return the window to its original size and location. It doesn’t get much simpler than that.
For even more power, though, try Moom in keyboard mode. You assign a global hot key, and which actions you’d like for various combinations of the arrow keys and modifier keys. Press the hot key, and the overlay image at right appears; you can then use the keys you’ve set up to move your windows around.