Many thanks to Eternal Storms Software for sponsoring us again this week. SiriMote works by pairing the Siri Remote to any Mac that supports Bluetooth 4.0 and is running OS X El Capitan. ScreenFloat is an app crafted with care by Eternal Storms Software, also responsible for Yoink, Transloader, Glimpses, flickery and SiriMote. ScreenFloat Website (free 15-day Demo available) | ScreenFloat on the Mac App Store ($8.99) On your Siri Remote, press and hold the Menu and Volume Up buttons for about five seconds.
Sirimote app install#
Shots can be made more or less translucent, so comparing two versions of your work is easier and quicker, they can be dragged out for use in other applications, copied, printed or shared via OS X’s sharing services. SiriMote lets you control any app that supports your Macs keyboards media keys (rewind, play/pause, fast forward, usually on the F7-F9 keys). Install SiriMote, then open System Preferences and go to the Bluetooth pane. This makes ScreenFloat a great screenshots manager as well.
They remain there, until you need them floating again. SiriMote v1.4 is now available, and on macOS 11 Big Sur and newer it now. SiriMote allows Mac remote control with Siri Remote. ScreenFloat keeps track of your screenshots in its “Shots Browser”, where shots can be tagged and categorized. Eternal Storms Software carefully crafted the following Mac and iOS apps. At the same time the company has published LogicRemotean iPad app that lets you control Logic Pro X.
Sirimote app full#
That information is readily available at Apple’s website, and you could manually type it into an email by switching back and forth between Safari and Mail (which can be particularly annoying if you’re using full screen apps) or, with ScreenFloat, you can simply grab all of the relevant information in a screenshot which then stays on top of any window or application, even while in full screen mode. This is where SiriMote comes in, as it enables the user to use the Apple TV Siri Remote with all sorts of applications on the Mac, like iTunes, Keynote, QuickTime, VLC and more. Say a friend is in the market for a new MacBook Pro and you want to help them compare the features between the various models.