

The colours themselves have become a lot more subtle yet more elegant. This means colours, button animations, layouts, shadows, and many small changes together create a much more streamlined user experience, making old versions of TagSpaces look quite “rough” in comparison.

The new UI is based on Google’s material paradigm. When you load up the new version, a very similar, albeit much improved interface will greet you. Of course the most noticeable changes are those of the UI. Since then there have been at least nine new versions bringing significant new functionality and many more bugfix releases, so TagSpaces is as exciting now as ever. (You can find out more about the basic functionality in our previous review article.
#TAGSPACES PRO SEE MS WORD PORTABLE#
The ability to sort, organise, preview or even edit many file formats and save portable tags as part of the filename – all without the need for a database, an internet connection, or any subscription/proprietary software – were among the best features TagSpaces offered. TagSpaces was already an excellent choice for personal file management even in its early release versions. To download the latest version for your system (be it Linux, Mac, Windows, Chrome and Firefox plugins, Android, iOS apps), go here Major improvements TagSpaces is available for all major desktop and mobile platforms, offering a uniform user experience everywhere and making it probably less native-looking (yet not out of place), but truly cross-platform in user experience as well as installability.
