BumpTop replaces your desktop with a visual environment unlike any
you've used. It's a bit like a futuristic gesture-based interface, but
it's tied to your mouse. Were it capable of simultaneous Web browsing,
its utility would be much more apparent.
BumpTop makes the items on your computer's desktop more like their
real-world counterparts. Icons and folders are assigned a virtual weight
based on the amount of memory they take up and their importance to you.
You can move them by click-and-drag, or fling them across the BumpTop
space. The program determines their importance based on how often you
use them, but you can also alter that by hand. In a way, BumpTop takes
the "Cover Flow" concept to the next level. Stack items to keep them
organized, flip through them as you would a photo album, sprawl them
across the desktop arbitrarily, or order them in staid grids. Circular
wheel pie menus make options a mouse flick away, and the 3D "walls" make
for fast posting to Facebook, e-mailing, and Twittering.
To alter a group of items, you lasso them--but you probably haven't used
a lasso like this before. Unlike the square-edged standard Windows
lasso, this one lets you select objects by drawing circles around them.
Icons can be more scattered without it slowing your work flow because
factors like angle, size changing, proximity, and icon flipping all
impact on how you interact with your desktop. There's a built-in photo
viewer, and although it doesn't allow for user interactions yet, the
Safari and Chrome browsing engine WebKit is baked in, too.
If WebKit moves toward integrating browsing with your desktop in a
customizable manner, and more gesture-based hardware support becomes
commonplace, it could push how we use our computers into a whole new
dimension.
The program will change your desktop into 3D
Do you want the program ?
You can
download it
here