sapiens_ui

Sapiens floats above any window and elegantly mirrors your desktop picture. This provides a very personalized appearance that immediately fits your style.



sapiens_intelligence

Smart

The average Mac user has about 100 applications installed in his/her system, but only a third has been used to some extent, and just a tenth is used regularly. Sapiens can accurately learn and understand the applications you use and is therefore able to make reliable predictions about the set of applications you are most likely to launch. For this reason it may take 2-3 days for it to have a enough brain power to make accurate predictions. And of course as your habits change Sapiens keeps adapting to them by constantly learning from you.


sapiens_activation

Mouse-Centric

We would like to achieve what we call a "launch at first sight experience". Our eyes are extremely fast and can find the right icon in a few milliseconds, provided the icons are visible and there are not too many on screen. Because Sapiens knows what applications you are likely to launch, it can show you the few icons that you really care about.
Given these premises, we also need a way to activate Sapiens with the mouse. If we would use a keyboard shortcut such as control-space for example, we could just as well perform a standard search since our hands are on the keyboard already. Because we want you to solely use the mouse we came up with an innovative way to invoke Sapiens: a mouse gesture. To activate Sapiens you can simply move your mouse in a circle until Sapiens appears.
This mouse gesture also opens a new era of drag & drop. If you want to open a file with a specific application, simply drag the file and move the mouse in circle. Sapiens will be activated and you will be able to drag your file over the application you want to open the file with.
Obviously you can enable a keyboard shortcut too, but we encourage you to use the mouse circle activation to access Sapiens.
Both the icons' visual layout and the mouse gesture activation make an amazing "launch at first sight experience" possible


sapiens_search

Search as last resort

Sapiens will try predict to the applications you want to launch, but it may not always be 100% correct. Especially at the beginning when you are using Sapiens for the first time and Sapiens hasn't learned much from your habits, you may want to search.
Searching is very easy: by simply beginning to type at anytime, you will prompt a search field to show up and the result will come as you type. For example, if you type "cal", both iCal and Calculator will be found. Abbreviations also works, for example if you search for "TE", TextEdit will show up.
Lastly, if you want to visually browse your applications, you can also use the the arrow-keys (or mouse scroll wheel) to move through your applications.


sapiens_ui

Kinesthetic Memory

The layout in which applications are shown is radial and is not as random as it might seem. You can think about it as a solar system in which the icons represent planets and satellites.
Each application is associated with a radial category and therefore will be always in the same radial position. For example, System Preferences is always at the top in the default layout called "Trinity". This fixed position of the applications is very important because it helps you develop what is known as Kinesthetic Memory.
As you start using Sapiens everyday, you will realize that your eyes look for a specific application in specific position. For example, you will always look at the top for System Preferences, or at the bottom right for Safari.
The way applications are associated to a radial category is immutable and it is the same on every single Mac, whether you are using your home iMac or your friend's MacBook. It doesn't matter: your Kinesthetic Memory will help you find what you are trying to launch.