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Kando is amazing

Having never reliably gotten the Actions Ring with the current MX4 in LogiOptions+ working I was getting frustrated. I recently got an Ultrawide OLED and wanted my taskbar / dock hidden to prevent screenburn but soon realised that waiting for it to pop up to switch apps when I'm working was a bit tedious. Actions Ring seemed like the answer - using it like a circle dock. Except that it only works sometimes on Mac, and it's a bit clunky even when it does.

So I went down a rabbit hole of free and paid circle dock / launcher thingies - Pieoneer, Launchy, Oribital, Dory. None of them did what I wanted - they all had their quirks. Then I discovered Kando. It's fantastic - highly customisable, cross platform (Linux, Max, and Windows). I'm barely scratching the surface by just using it as a launcher. Nice that I have the same thing on my Mac and Windows machines.

One cool feature - you can have multiple Menus, each triggered by a different set of keystrokes. I have two and have them assigned to two buttons on my MX4, but it also worked well off one button for the main menu, and ctrl+same button for secondary menu.

It's really neat, so I thought I'd share. And it's free. Developed by u/Schneegans who has some great YouTube content describing it.

https://kando.menu/

https://redd.it/1r5avvh
@macappsbackup
Sticky Notes

Is there a FREE sticky notes app that syncs across devices?

Seems to be lot of sticky apps (all very colorful) but I haven’t see any specs that suggests the sticky note will synch across other devices

https://redd.it/1r5abwq
@macappsbackup
OS eMule for macOS ...

A friend "ported" eMule to macOS. You might find this interesting. Feel free to ping him on github if you want to give feedback / contribute.

https://github.com/mderouet/macMule

I brought eMule back to life on macOS — here's macMule

I grew up downloading on eMule in the early 2000s. A few months ago I wondered: does eMule still work? Turns out the ed2k and Kad networks are still alive.

So I packaged eMule as a proper macOS .app — drag it to Applications, launch it, and it auto-connects. Works on Apple Silicon through Rosetta 2.

GitHub: https://github.com/mderouet/macMule

It's about 1 GB because it bundles Wine Crossover, but after that it's zero-configuration.

Fair warning: with modern internet speeds you won't get the authentic 48-hour wait for a 700 MB DivX rip of The Matrix anymore. Progress bar enthusiasts may be disappointed.

Feedback welcome!

https://redd.it/1r5dile
@macappsbackup
Really we cannot clear cache on Mac Os ?

There is not apps to clear cache ? Or « purgeable space » ? In Ms Windows i used Ccleaner regulary but in Mac Os it’s not the same.
Can you suggest apps to clear cache and purgeable space please ?
I upgraded to Tahoe and got 120gb of free space liberated. That’s crazy.

Help please.

https://redd.it/1r5g523
@macappsbackup
[OS] FrameExporter – My first open source macOS app for ultra-fast video frame export
https://redd.it/1r5gxue
@macappsbackup
BundleHunt's First Sale of 2026 Is Live - Lifetime Licenses Only

The first[ BundleHunt](https://bundlehunt.com/?ap_id=MacPicks) sale of 2026 kicked off today. This round is focused entirely on lifetime licenses - no one-year subnoscriptions or short-term trials disguised as deals. Update eligibility for major or minor releases still varies by app, so always check the fine print before buying.

In tech, big names rise fast and disappear just as quickly. When a company sticks around for well over a decade, there's usually a reason. BundleHunt has been doing its thing since 2010, offering a different twist on software bundles: you build your own. That means you're not forced into buying 30 apps just to get the three you actually want.

Over the years, they've built a decent reputation for fixing problems when a purchase doesn't work out, and I've picked up a few solid tools there myself - including Keyboard Maestro, Mountain Duck, and Downie. The catalog always includes lesser-known apps too, which is both fun and dangerous. Affordable software has a way of convincing you that you suddenly *need* something you'll never open again. Discipline required.

# Apps I Can Personally Vouch For

These aren't just random listings - they're legitimate contenders in their categories.

# [TextSniper](https://appaddict.app/post/textsniper)

​TextSniper is one of those deceptively simple utilities that ends up becoming part of your daily workflow. It's an OCR tool that lets you grab text from almost anywhere: videos, PDFs, presentations, screenshots, online courses - basically anything visible on your screen.

Draw a box around the text and it captures it. Rotation, odd angles, and shadows usually aren't a problem. There's a handy option to remove line breaks automatically, and an additive clipboard mode that makes multi-step capture painless.

Real-world use case: grabbing command output from a video tutorial or copying text from an app that inexplicably doesn't allow selection.

**Developer Price** \- $9.99

**BundleHunt Price** \- $2.00

# [MacPilot 17](https://appaddict.app/post/mac-pilot-for-customization-and-utilities)

​MacPilot is a system-tweaking utility with an almost absurd number of options - over 1,100 tweaks at last count. Think of it as a centralized control panel for settings Apple hides or spreads across plist files and command-line flags.

A few examples of what it can do:

* Calendar: change default event duration
* Dock: enable single-app mode or window previews
* Finder: enable "Quit Finder"
* Launchpad: reset layout and control rows/columns
* Music: enable half-star ratings
* QuickTime: remember open movies on quit
* Safari: restore backspace navigation
* Screen Capture: change default file type
* Spotlight: rebuild index
* Terminal: focus follows mouse
* Time Machine: disable automatic backup prompts

Power users will appreciate having everything in one place instead of hunting down obscure terminal commands.

**Developer Price** \- $29.99

**BundleHunt Price** \- $3.99

# [Lingon Pro](https://appaddict.app/post/stop-making-cron-jobs)

​Lingon Pro has been around for more than two decades, which is practically geological time in Mac utility years. It remains one of the best GUI front-ends for launchd - the scheduling and background-task system built into macOS. Lingon Pro will be available during this sale, but it is not on the BundleHunt home page today.

You can create jobs that run:

* whether your Mac is awake or asleep
* whether you're logged in or not
* with elevated privileges when needed
* using keep-alive rules to restart failed tasks automatically

If you run noscripts, backups, or maintenance tasks behind the scenes and don't want to babysit cron files or plist syntax, this is one of the cleanest ways to do it.

**Developer Price** \- $23.99

**BundleHunt Price** \- $4.00

# Apps That Look Interesting

These are the ones that caught my eye but aren't part of my regular toolkit - yet.

# [Infinidesk](https://infinidesk.app)

Infinidesk tries to solve desktop clutter by letting you create multiple desktop
environments, each with its own files, folders, and wallpaper.

Two modes stand out:

* **Classic Mode** \- one project-focused desktop across all Spaces
* **Follow Spaces Mode** \- desktop contents change automatically as you switch Spaces in Mission Control

If your Mac desktop becomes a dumping ground by noon every day, this could be a surprisingly practical way to enforce structure without changing your habits.

**Developer Price** \- $12.99

**BundleHunt Price** \- $3.00

# [Rocket Typist](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/rocket-typist/id6463636684)

Rocket Typist has developed a loyal following fast. It's a text expansion and snippet manager that regularly comes up in discussions alongside TextExpander and Typinator - usually because it adds a few modern touches those veterans don't emphasize.

Highlights include:

* folders for organizing snippets
* support for plain text, rich text, code, images, and AI-generated snippets
* strong search and filtering for large libraries

If you live in repetitive text - support emails, documentation, or code templates - tools like this pay for themselves quickly.

**Developer Price** \- $19.99

**BundleHunt Price** \- $3.50

# [Dock Star](https://dockstar.app)

Anyone who misses the late, great DragThing will probably perk up here. Dock Star lets you build custom, hideable docks anywhere on your screen.

Notable features:

* customizable docks with tabs and themes
* quick access to folders, drives, and network shares
* integration with Apple Shortcuts for automation triggers
* scene switching for different workflows or monitor setups

The nostalgia factor is real, but the utility angle is solid if you like highly customized desktop layouts. Rocket Typist isn't listed on the BundleHunt homepage today, but it will become available during this sale.

**Developer Price** \- $20.00

**BundleHunt Price** \- $4.50

# Final Thoughts

Bundle sales live in that weird intersection between smart bargain hunting and impulsive software hoarding. The build-your-own model helps keep things sane, but the temptation to pick up "just one more app" is very real. Some might say it's an addiction.

The practical approach: start with a specific workflow problem you're trying to solve. If an app clearly fits that need - great. If not, leave it in the cart and walk away. Your future self will thank you.

And if you're the kind of Mac user who enjoys experimenting without committing to subnoscriptions, this is one of the cleaner opportunities to stock up without the recurring-cost hangover.

https://redd.it/1r5qruh
@macappsbackup
Subnoscriptions

So many subnoscription apps in the macOS world. Well, probably in all computing except Linux.

Whether subnoscription models are valid or popular isn’t part of this question. Let’s just assume for this matter that they’re a fait accompli.

What are the macOS apps that are definitely worth using as a subnoscription?

I’ll start, even if lifetime subnoscription disappears as an option tomorrow UpNote would still be worth the $2 per month.

https://redd.it/1r5ucok
@macappsbackup
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
I built a macOS native «System Data» inspector + uninstaller app. Hopefully no more «How do I clean System Data?» posts.

https://redd.it/1r6129o
@macappsbackup
macOS 26.4 is warning that Rosetta 2 is going away — what apps are you still stuck with?

Looks like Apple is finally throwing up notifications about Rosetta 2 being discontinued.

Now I’m wondering how many of us are still running Intel‑only apps without realizing it. I thought I was fully native until I checked and found a couple random tools still sneaking through Rosetta.

Anyway — what Intel‑only apps are still hanging around on your system? Any niche tools you’re worried might break once Rosetta finally disappears?

https://redd.it/1r6o3nn
@macappsbackup
Four Small Apps That Remove Friction

I've never understood why, given its resources, Apple still leaves obvious friction points in macOS.

# Problems

Take battery levels. Most of us are running Bluetooth keyboards, mice, trackpads, and of course battery-powered laptops. Yet macOS still makes you dig around System Settings to see what's about to die. That feels like a solved problem.

Or window management in Mission Control. I use it dozens of times a day to move windows between Spaces and displays. It's powerful--but incomplete. There's no way to close a window directly from that view. That omission is hard to justify when third-party developers solved it years ago.

Then there's local music management. With subnoscription fatigue and algorithmic sludge everywhere, more people are curating and managing their own libraries again. Apple Music works fine for streaming, but as an ID3 tag editor and metadata tool, it's clumsy at best. Keeping album art and tags clean shouldn't feel like archaeology.

And finally, Font Book. It looks capable at first glance. Spend five minutes using it seriously and you'll notice what's missing: meaningful comparisons, smart organization, and workflow-friendly tools.

# Solutions

Batteries for Mac is $2 during the sale (normally $8.99). It shows battery levels for iPhones, keyboards, mice (including third-party), MacBooks, and AirPods.

You can monitor everything from the menu bar or use its desktop widget for a heads-up display. No digging through System Settings. If you've ever had a keyboard die mid-sentence or a mouse quit during a screen share, you know why this matters. Also available on SetApp.

## TuneTag

Stop fighting Apple Music for metadata control. For $0.50 (normally $4.99), TuneTag gives you a focused ID3 editor that does one job well.

It supports:

Direct metadata editing
Incrementing track numbers
File renaming based on custom patterns
Templates for consistent tagging

If you manage a local library--especially anything ripped, imported, or sourced outside Apple's ecosystem--this saves time and frustration.

## Mission Control Plus

Mission Control Plus fills in the gaps Apple left. For $2.50 (normally $8.99), it adds:

An X button to close windows directly inside Mission Control
Keyboard shortcuts for closing, minimizing, quitting, and more

If you live in Spaces, this turns Mission Control from a viewer into a control surface. It's one of those small upgrades that compounds over time. (You can get some of this functionality in WINs and in Click2Minimize) Mission Control Plus is also on SetApp.

## Specimen

For $2.50 (normally $29), Specimen is a serious upgrade over Font Book.

It lets you:

Browse and organize fonts intelligently
Compare fonts side-by-side
Run font health checks
Preview variable fonts
Export PDF specimens
Generate developer-friendly font declarations in multiple formats

If you care about typography--whether for writing, web work, or client projects--this feels like a professional tool rather than a system afterthought.

None of these apps are flashy. They fix specific, practical annoyances. That's exactly the kind of software I like to support--tools that respect your time and improve real workflows instead of selling you abstractions.

If you've been meaning to tighten up any of these areas in macOS, this is a cheap way to do it.

Check out this post on AppAddict , if you want information on where to buy these apps on sale. For the next week or two I'm going to be testing several apps from the same vendor (but different developers) and I don't want anyone on Reddit to feel like they are being marketed to.

https://redd.it/1r9ygc9
@macappsbackup
Pola Browser v0.34: Spaces for project focus, multi-tab actions and a new Cmd+Shift+C shortcut
https://redd.it/1rakwl0
@macappsbackup
DropFormer – Auto-converts AirDropped HEIC photos to JPEG/PNG from your menu bar
https://redd.it/1raluq1
@macappsbackup
Bloom can't handle permissions ?

I'm going insane on this and I want to know if I am the problem or if Bloom is the problem.

I deal with hundreds of files in "restricted" locations like /Library/Audio/Plug-Ins for example and I was so bummed to find that I can't interact with those folders that needs permissions... In finder and QSpace Pro, I simply get a Touch ID request when trying to move out or move in files in those "sensitive" locations. In Bloom it simply says "You don't have permissions to do X in Y folder."

I know that Bloom is relatively popular so I can't believe no one complained about this already.

Of course, I added Bloom to Full Disk Access and Accessibility Permissions. Yet it doesn't change anything.

Please don't tell me I wasted 17$ on this.

And I think I'm missing something because who would market their apps "Finder Replacement" and not even handle permissions ?

I thought about sudo chown the folders but I wanna know if there is any other fix before litterally removing any access permissions from those folders.

Cheers !

https://redd.it/1ra98bz
@macappsbackup
Recommend some bookmark apps?

I’m tired of storing bookmarks in the browser. I’d like something I can access via a keyboard shortcut and from the menu bar.

I prefer something simple not visual like Raindrop. I don’t like that style.

Free or lifetime pricing is fine. Thanks.

https://redd.it/1rao3c6
@macappsbackup
Choosing the Best Screen recorder for MAC

I am browsing this reddit and became very confused seeing the long list of screen recorder apps. Someone provided a google sheet and I consulted with gemini to find the best match, still when I checked manually, the stats are kinda not matching what I was exactly looking for.

Must have features I have been looking for:
1. Window selection flexibility (Can do full recording, can do selected region recording, can do only app window recording)

2. Blur the background (Audience must not see what's behind the desktop background)

3. Webcam positing flexibility (With blur effect)
4. System audio selection flexibility (Multi-output/input like microphone/system audio selection or simultaneous recording)

5. Zoom (both cursor following and manual zoom flexibility)

6. Annotation tool (Mark up, arrow, highlight etc. features)

Can someone kindly recommend few apps that satisfies all my requirement? I am not looking for expensive subnoscription. Free or One time payment works well (Obs I do have, but I am not equipped with proper knowledge to use it).

7. Built with privacy focus.

I have seen screenpal, screenstudio but can someone recommend that fulfills all of the requirement?

Would be Bonus if (Not mandatory)
The app has both windows, macos support.



https://redd.it/1ra89tg
@macappsbackup