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r/macapps subreddit backup on Telegram. A backup Project by @RoadToPetabyte and @AppleStyleOfficial http://pixly.me/rtp Join our subreddit backup on Discord, Telegram and Pinterest: https://discord.gg/abCudZwgBr or @redditbackup
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App to time/date stamp photos in a form of watermark?

I want to print photos like way back with date stamps in them (date taken).

I want to do them by batch.

https://redd.it/1op2qai
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Is there an app that can tell me why my mouse is lagging? Or how can I figure this out?

On a fresh reboot, mouse works fine. But it starts to lag after a while and I cannot figure out why. Is there an app that can take a snapahot of system resources and compare snapshots to figure out what is different? This is both mouse and trackpad, so it does not seem to be related to the device.

https://redd.it/1op71wj
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Moom + Keyboard Maestro for Folder Org

https://preview.redd.it/834chpje5hzf1.jpg?width=3840&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=4f25c9adfb56e69123e7ba790f0146c7a54ab65c

Hey all, I figured I'd share a workflow of mine that helped me mow down through about 80,000 files, some of them hard-to-ID duplicates from over the years, since 2011. There's a lot of AI slop this year, and vaporware over the years, and I wanted to share a stable workflow worked for me and can adapt to a number of apps. I'm not an influencer, just a very relieved and (hopefully formerly) disorganized person. What I used, you can find an alternate or two at least.

I'm gearing up to start my own small business next year (local creative/photography, not online), and I wanted to make sure my portfolio, reference files, inspiration/ education/ assets were in order. So I've been at this for the better part of the summer and I just completed it.

This whole project was just moving files from A to B, but it's helpful to see other locations while you're at it. In my main window (1), I have column layout and evaluating what needs to move. I'm often dragging from (1) to (2), but you can use copy/paste, or with a 3rd party app, cut and paste. There's also an apple shortcut for cut and paste. Anyways, The goal is to empty the folder in window 1 and then delete it by moving its contents in to window 2, which follows a preset folder structure that I spent a long time designing. Windows (3) and (4) allow me to review the process as I go along or change course.

On a 16x9 4K monitor, Moom organizes that like 6x4. The small boxes are 2x2, and the rectangle is 2x4.

Doing this semi-manually was important, for review/memory purposes. Some things go back to 2014 and will be used going forward. I also took my time.

With Moom and Keyboard Maestro, the second I plug in my laptop and close my lid on a specific account, Finder opens four windows and aligns to the windows as displayed. Moom can mostly do it, but Keyboard Maestro can use a million inputs, like plugging in a specific SD card, as a trigger for an automation. Recently, I used Transnomino to rename 2400 photos - trimming a wildcard string off the end of those files. I have disk drill from an emergency last year and that was helpful in identifying duplicate files this year. I used Hazel to tag certain things for later review, and now I use it to keep screenshots and Downie pulls organized. I also used a command in terminal called diff -rq which compares two folders and spits out the differences, but I found that at the end lol. So between diff and disk drill, I was able to feel comfortable deleting identified duplicates.

The sidebar of this subreddit has a robust list of Mac apps by category I just wanted to share something that worked for me and made it fairly effortless in terms of how I wanted to approach this. I'm not a coder, don't really understand Automator or Shortcuts, and have a life, so I used some stuff to help make some tedious things less tedious, according to my skill/comfort level. I'm sure some of the apps I have overlap in terms of functions.

Some alternatives I know of to Moom: Rectangle/Pro, Magnet, Bunch. Some alternatives to Transnomino: Name Mangler, A better finder rename. Some alternatives to Keyboard Maestro: Automator, Hazel, Shortcuts, AppleScript, the MacMost guy.

I had up to 5 duplicates of the same file, but over time the name changed sometimes, and it feels great to have them all arranged for usage, and the rest archived until needed (if ever). This sub has been super helpful so I'm writing this up for reference purposes not for views. This might not be relevant if you're better at Mac than I am, in which case please share the better ways!



https://redd.it/1opabx3
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I am distributing free keys for my app to collect feedback.

Hey! I’m looking for beta testers for a new app that turns the Mac notch into a functional “Dynamic Island” (and creates a virtual one if your Mac doesn’t have a notch).

It’s not just visual, it shows live media controls for Spotify and Apple Music, modern system alerts for volume/brightness/power, notifications from iMessage/WhatsApp/Telegram, and can add media and weather widgets to your lockscreen. I’m giving out free permanent license keys to anyone who tests and gives feedback. Just comment and I’ll DM you a link and key. Thank you!

https://redd.it/1opbnqa
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Do you have an "exit strategy" for your apps?

I take a look at my apps and I always try to plan an "exit strategy," in case I need to abandon an app for whatever reason.

My computer journey starts back in 1984 and goes like this:

Atari 800XL → Macintosh Plus → Some generic PC I built myself running Windows 95/98 → PowerMac G4 → HP Desktop running Ubuntu Linux → Mac mini → ThinkPad laptop running Arch Linux → 16" MacBook Pro.

Now clearly I don't need the data I generated on my Mac Plus back in 1986 any more. But at the time I made each hop, there was data I needed to get over to the new platform. Some things were easy such as MS Office files. Some things were hard, such as Quicken data, Print Shop files.

So, now that I am older and wiser, I pick apps with an exit strategy in mind. If I can't get an app to export data in a way that another app can read it, unless I don't have a choice.

As someone who used Linux as my full-time OS for a very long time I remember a constant barrage of posts from people saying they'd love to use Linux full-time, but they need a replacement app for XXX that can read all the files they created in that app. And I'm trying to not put myself in that situation. I don't want to be trapped.

https://redd.it/1opbdhc
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1001 Recording App Review

Hey guys I just wanted to leave a review for this screen recording app I've been using lately. I’ve been using 1001 Record for about two months now, mostly for personal projects and tutoring. I’m a high school student, and I record my online lessons and videos of me explaining math concepts to myself so I can rewatch them later and understand things better.

Out of all the recording apps I've used, I like this one the most. I've used OBS and Quiktime before, but neither of them captured desktop audio without a 3rd party set up. 1001 Record is very self-intuitive, records desktop audio without any third party setup (like OBS), and the UI feels really clean. I also love the additional options like being able to schedule recordings, capture a single window, highlight keystrokes. They also recently added an auto-zoom feature that I haven't tried out yet. I haven't had any major issues with it yet. I barely post on Reddit but I after looking I barely found any reviews on this app so I felt like it had to be shared.


I attached a screenshot of the UI as a well as a recording.

https://reddit.com/link/1opa50j/video/qn6u2nf1ahzf1/player

https://preview.redd.it/q0rpyhux8hzf1.png?width=1136&format=png&auto=webp&s=b8457f1112a965723c5b99887597df86d2d154a5



https://redd.it/1opa50j
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MediaMate vs Alcove

I am looking for a nice dynamic island for mac. The two I found are MediaMate and Alcove. Which one do you recommend ? Is there a third alternative I should look at ?

https://redd.it/1opqfck
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Imprint — a Mac-native, privacy-first watermarking app (visible + invisible) for creators
https://redd.it/1opssg9
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Voiden: The API client that doesn't want your email address

Somewhere along the way, API tooling has lost the plot.
With a few good exceptions, API clients have become bloated SaaS platforms.
Voiden is the opposite.

What Voiden doesn't do:

Ask for an account
Send telemetry
Paywall basic features
Store your data in "the cloud"
Require an internet connection for localhost

What it does:

Define, test, and document APIs in Markdown files (executable .void format)
Version and collaborate with Git
Extend with plugins (Faker for test data, OAuth, custom auth)
Built-in terminal (with multiple tabs)
Link blocks across documents instead of neverending copy-paste hops (eg. define auth or query params once, reference everywhere with auto-sync)
Import Postman collections and OpenAPI specs
Use keyboard shortcuts, native menus, and command palette (Cmd+Shift+P) instead of infinite loop of tab and click actions
Override \`.env\` fields in a tiered structure
Override JSON fields without repeating entire objects.
Response previews for PDFs, images, videos, audio, etc
...

Well, it does a bunch of cool stuff.
But among the coolest ones is it's super light.

P.S. The v1.0 beta release is out there, and it's counting days until the stable release, plus some more weeks to open the source code (yes, while we're still in 2025).

P.P.S. What would you need there to make it even beter?

Voiden in action

https://redd.it/1opso56
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Ping Uptime Monitor - Power, Configurable, Cheap

[Ping Uptime Monitor](https://preview.redd.it/amrmme3znmzf1.jpg?width=340&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1e5a86bbecd19be4ea9ece6bad55200bcba9f67f)

**Ping Uptime Monitor** by Neat Software is a lightweight menubar app that monitors the availability and response time of any entity with an IP address: websites, APIs, servers, routers, devices and workstations. When problems are detected, it alerts you. It has a limited free tier and a pro upgrade to unlock the full feature set(one-time purchase, not subnoscription). You may be thinking that you don't ned a tool to do your pinging, since that's a command line tool that's among the first that many of us ever learned, but bear with me, because Ping Uptime Monitor can de some useful stuff.

*Features*

* **Heads up display** via a color coded icon in the menu bar, allowing you to quickly assess the status of your website or API without keeping a browser tab open
* **Local notifications** when the status of a monitored address fails or exceeds a user-defined metric so that you are the first to know if an asset goes offline before its users can start complaining
* **Supports HTTP and ICMP** pinging so you can monitor your home router (ICMP) and a public website you want to track (HTTP)
* **Supports IP4 and IP6**
* **Reports**on slow response times, not just a binary up/down. You can determine at what speed you want to be notified so that you can mitigate anything running slow or dropping packets
* **User defined ping intervals** so that you don't flood some poor endpoint. You can set different intervals for different targets and the more important a device is, the more frequently you can check it
* **Excellent logging capability**that can be piped or streamed out. Although you don't get a different log for every device, it is quite easy to filter the log so you can see exactly what you want to see
* **Automation**\- Webhook capable so that it can use email, Slack or SMS to notify you when there are problems and you are AFK. It is also has AppleScript support
* **Display customization** so that you can select just want you want to see: icons, status colors, response times, etc.
* **Privacy focused** \- nothing is routed through third-part devices. All communication is between your Mac and the endpoints you monitor.
* \*\*CSV Imports \*\*- got a spreadsheet with all the wireless access point IP addresses in your building? Import that sucker!

# What's in the Newest Version (September 2025)

* Support for macOS26 Tahoe
* Auto-restores paid pro upgrades when moved to a new machine
* Auto-restart after 1 million pings to relieve any memory pressure and improve stability

# This app is not for you if...

* You need advanced or per-device logging
* You want to create different groups of addresses to reflect different sites
* You need enterprise level features such as deep analytics, long-term trend reports and other features common in more expensive monitoring suites.
* You need an audible alarm (although this is a much requested feature)

# Other Tools

This is a useful tool for small workplaces, home lab and power users. It compares to the FOSS app, [nping](https://nmap.org/book/nping-man.html). For broader use cases, check out [Uptime Kuma](https://uptime.kuma.pet). An online tool that you might useful is [Uptimerobot](https://uptimerobot.com/)

# Availability

You can get the free and paid version ($14.99) of Ping Uptime Monitor from [Neat Software](https://ping.neat.software/). It's currently on sale for $3 for [Black Friday - here](https://bundlehunt.com/2025blackfridaybundle).

https://redd.it/1opx9jg
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