I was very close to purchasing coodesker. I think the developer over there is very ambitious and is really pushing out updates fast. This is not a free product so it requires a purchase off of steam. What really stands out on this product is that they have tabs built into their box's (fences) and the tabs are very hard to leave behind once they have been experienced.
Fences still has a few things of its own that draws me back over to stardock. The ability to create pages on a desktop really is one of Stardocks staples and the ability to hide fences is way better with Stardock.
Thanks for the tip. I actually bought Coodesker because of it, here is a short list of the pros/cons:
Pros
- perpetual license for about 8 USD for three machines. You can buy it either on Steam or their website
- tabs in "boxes" (-> fences)
- most of the more prominent features Fences has are actually there in one form or another
- "recent files"-box and smart-box (basically, an enhanced folder portal where you quite comfortably can do basic file managment operations without opening a file manager)
- slicker, more snappier settings menu and customization
- smaller footprint on resources, much faster start
- there seems to be some kind of caching for "map boxes" (-> folder portals) - unlike Fences it can show me the content of folders on network shares right when I boot up my system. Fences always struggled with that.
Cons
- well, unlike you speak Chinese, you probably won't get much support... for the tool itself, but also for the purchasing process (if you don't buy on Steam). For 8 bucks I personally can live with that, but keep that in mind. The software itself is translated to English (besides Chinese, simplified Chinese and Japanese). We also don't know about the long-term support here.
- no column headers or details-view in "map boxes" and therefor much less sorting options and basically no optionally displayable file information besides the name of the file itself
- only roll-down "boxes" for the upper part of the desktop, but no roll-up "boxes" for the lower part above the taskbar
- auto-sorting is much more limited (basically: name and file-extension) - sadly no sorting by path or shortcut-target or anything like that (well, honestly, that one hurts). And even in the options which are there, wildcards don't seem to work (at least not when sorting by name) (this actually works after a reboot)
- no desktop pages or anything similar to that
- customization of the appearance for "boxes" is a bit more basic
- hiding all "boxes" only through non-customizable double-click (the only customizable hotkeys are the peek-key, the smart-box key and... well, the reorganize-key, but you probably want to set the reorganize-setting to auto anyway)
Conclusion: it does what it needs to do. If you switch from Fences, you gain some, but you also lose some. I also tried Portals: Desktop Organization and quite liked it, however, its approach with its own folders is a bit different, there are no sorting rules at all and I had a few issues with portals (->fences) not showing up until I manually opened the app from the systray after a reboot.