![]() A DwellClick customer had emailed me: “The mouse is not fast enough for me. ![]() It started as an offshoot from DwellClick, my assistive app for using a Mac without pressing a mouse button. RapidClick first appeared on the Mac App Store on 25th March 2011. It was RapidClick that actually broke through and sold enough to make me think there might be some possibility in this whole app development thing. It sold very few copies and I was close to giving up. It was the second app I ever published – a few months before PopClip.Īt that time I had already released DwellClick (both 1.0 and 2.0), which I had spent more than a year of my life working on. And yet, it was a very important step in my Mac development “career”. I don’t talk about RapidClick very much – it is a very simple app and it’s not especially interesting to most people. It’s also now RapidClick’s 10 year anniversary. I did it here with this kind of bubble thing. If it is implemented well, they probably never really notice it it all. ![]() This permission prompt is the kind of UI flow that is really fiddly to make, and yet the user sees it only once in the lifetime of the app. Every developer loves the Secutiry & Privacy preferences pane. Now there is a proper welcome UI flow to guide the user to enable the permission. The update was long overdue, also fixing a long standing problem where RapidClick would crash if the user denied the system Accessibility permission prompt. RapidClick now shows a countdown to the next click.
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