Alternative To Ninite For Mac
Is the most popular 'package manager' for Windows, but I didn't like the limited selection. I moved to, which has a much larger selection and automatically detects installed programs. Neither of these supported custom programs, so I kept looking and found, which is a bit trickier to set up, but supports anything on, and you can add just about any other program. It does have a major downside in that silent installs can be a bit tricky, as you have to identify the type of installer to know which flag to use.There are also more traditional package managers, the most popular being, but unless you've been using a package manager for everything you've installed, at least when I tried it, you need to reinstall everything through the package manager for it to register.There are some other variants on Chocolatey, but most of them are pretty much the same, with maybe a few different packages. Let me know if I missed anything important.Edit: I almost forgot, which is basically Ninite but with a larger selection of software, but it is still in beta. My needs are fairly light so Ninite is good enough for me for the most part. My one gripe with it is that if it has something I don't like, I have to go back and make all my selections again, and that can get tedious.
Ninite doesn’t work on Mac. However, the Ninite alternatives provide similar quality to install turns of apps on Mac computer automatically. Both the Ninite pro and Ninite free, none work on Mac computer. Instead of using the Ninite on Windows alone and not finding a means to use it on Mac.
I recently moved to PatchMyPC on my laptop and will soon be putting it on the desktop. I had no idea there were more options, though I had heard of Chocolatey.Windows Remix looks cool, but I'm worried because their media section has MPC-HC and QuickTime, and no MPC-BE (the latest fork of MPC).
MPC-HC is probably good enough, but I thought QuickTime got axed? Maybe I am wrong about that.