That said, at $70 AF's well worth it, quirks and all. I'll update this thread after some time with Samplism to see if its a viable replacement. (Use this all the time for sound design.) It has a boat load of features if not familiar. (Really!) You can even audition samples pitched up or down in semitones, octaves, etc. You'll find samples you didn't even know you have. Move mouse pointer to the top of the screen. If you have hundreds of thousands of wave/aif files it can make your time hunting a hell of a lot shorter.) You can index entire drives, index folders, make playlists for projects or sound categories, etc. Unclutter stays hidden above your Desktop and opens instantly with one simple gesture. but any typical format including rex, appleloop, CAF, etc is supported.) (It won't read encrypted files like ncw, ewi, etc FYI. While quirky and not perfect, AudioFinder is a great resource if you have insanely huge collections of samples. If you are looking for only a clipboard manager, that amount may look like a lot. Gonna put the free version through its paces this weekend for an upcoming trailer project, if it does most things AudioFinder does without the quirks I'm in! Unclutter offers 7-day free trial and then you can pay 19.99 to unlock its full potential. Pretty sure I'm going to pick up the full version, ($60). You can database/organize and search up to 50,000 samples in the free version.
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