04-21-2006, 11:47 PM
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/17111
"MainMenu is an easy-to-use menubar item that allows you to run a large set of Mac OS X maintenance, cleaning and optimization tasks. MainMenu can repair permissions, update prebindings, clean system and users caches, empty many browsers caches/history, force empty the trash, clean logs, repair disks, and much more. Most tasks provide feedback in the log window during execution. The batch task function allows you to run many routines at once. Bug reports, feature requests, feedback (positive as well as negative) and anything else are welcome. MainMenu is currently free."
Author just updated it for 10.4.6 today (and apologized for the delay). I know you can do all this from the command line, and that there are other apps that do this (hello Cocktail) but I like it, and the fact I can run it out of the menubar.
UPDATE: Removed the title line about it being donationware; it's technically not. The author accepts payment but does not cripple the software. What kind of shareware is that? (I've since learned that donationware, according to Wikipedia, stipulates payment to a charity, etc.)
"MainMenu is an easy-to-use menubar item that allows you to run a large set of Mac OS X maintenance, cleaning and optimization tasks. MainMenu can repair permissions, update prebindings, clean system and users caches, empty many browsers caches/history, force empty the trash, clean logs, repair disks, and much more. Most tasks provide feedback in the log window during execution. The batch task function allows you to run many routines at once. Bug reports, feature requests, feedback (positive as well as negative) and anything else are welcome. MainMenu is currently free."
Author just updated it for 10.4.6 today (and apologized for the delay). I know you can do all this from the command line, and that there are other apps that do this (hello Cocktail) but I like it, and the fact I can run it out of the menubar.
UPDATE: Removed the title line about it being donationware; it's technically not. The author accepts payment but does not cripple the software. What kind of shareware is that? (I've since learned that donationware, according to Wikipedia, stipulates payment to a charity, etc.)