Best Mac Menu Bar Apps 2017

Menu bar has always been one defining characteristic of Mac operating system, which is often overlooked by users. But the power of Mac’s menu bar cannot be neglected! Today’s Apple menu is a repository for all the stuff you need to have a quick access to. We have jotted down a list of 10 useful menu bar applications which can significantly boost your productivity as well as enhance Mac’s performance.

Best

How To + Recommended + Software & Apps. 15 of the Best Menu Bar Extras for macOS Sierra. Posted on May 12th, 2017 by Craig Grannell. As we outline elsewhere, the macOS menu bar is tremendously useful. This article concentrates on the bit at the right-hand-side, where you can stash menu extras (also known as status menus) – little apps whose. Product Hunt is a curation of the best new products, every day. Discover the latest mobile apps, websites, and technology products that everyone's talking about.

Also Read: 10 Best Mac Apps you don’t want to miss in 2017

Here you go!

10 Best Mac Menu Bar Apps:-

1. Noizio

If you’re an easy distracter, then install this handy application right away. The app is capable of cutting down all the background noises and makes you exclusively hear your favorite sounds of your choice at the desired tempo. Get the app here

If you share files over a network or run background processes you don’t want to be interrupted, you have to change these settings, so your Mac stays awake. Or, you can install Amphetamine. This free app lives in the menu bar and allows you to override your Mac’s energy settings in just two clicks. The macOS menu bar is a great place for quickly accessing system and application functions using menu extras or 'menulets', but it can get cluttered pretty quickly as more and more icons vie for a.

2. One

  • List of menu bar apps that make your life easier. Best Mac Menu Bar Apps. List of menu bar apps that make your life easier. Prevents your Mac from sleeping. Secure your laptop with alarm. You can choose to receive a phone notification, a loud alarm to notify everyone around or both at the same time.
  • Itsycal- Tiny Calendar on the Menu Bar. Itsycal is a tiny calendar app that sits on the Menu Bar to.

Avid readers cannot afford to miss this app! It aggregates news from latest websites like Reddit, Product Hunt, Medium, etc. in a readable and simplistic manner. Get the app here

3.Disk Clean Pro

Keep your Mac fast and error free by installing the disk clean pro application. Disk Clean Pro is a powerful memory optimizer tool to enhances your mac’s performance in a single click. Not only this, it also gets rid of duplicates to save yourself some storage space. Get the App here

4.F.lux

The app works perfectly in reducing eye strain by optimizing your Mac’s display to match the time of the day.

P.S. Your eyes will thank us later! Get the app here

5. Endurance

Just as the name says, Endurance increases your Mac’s battery life by removing unwanted applications and shutting down programs that suck up the maximum amount of energy. Get the app here

Also Read: 10 Best Mac Cleaner Software to speed up your Mac

6.InsomniaX

Best Menu Bar Apps For Mac

InsomniaX disable the sleep mode of your Mac so that any of the music or movies which are probably being downloaded in the background don’t get disrupted. Get the app here

7.Popshot

Popshot is a handy app for your mac’s menu bar that quickly lets you take and capture screenshots. With PopShot, you can specify capture settings before you take a screenshot. The app saves screenshot info to your clipboard (and across app sessions!) for easy sharing. Get the app here

8. Simplify

This is one essential app for your menu bar-especially if you’re a music lover. This app could be your best friend. With just one click from the menu bar, Simplify lets you control a host of music apps. The supported list includes the desktop apps (Spotify, iTunes, Rdio, etc.) as well as web-based streaming apps (Pandora, Deezer, etc.). Get the app here

9. Paste

This app keeps track of everything you’ve ever copied, and allow you to see and use your clipboard history whenever you need it. It’ll keep track of text, images, links, files, and more. It’s one super useful application that will surely enhance your productivity. Get the app here

10. Bartender

Now that you’ve got so many apps, somebody gottta take charge. Bartender quickly reorders apps in menu bar according to your preference. It lets you keep your menu bar managed in a neat and tidy format. Get the app here

Also Read: 10 Reasons Why Mac is Better and Faster than Windows

These were just a few mac applications for your menu bar; Market is flooded with a bunch of applets which can make your life much easier. Let us know if you happen to know any other useful app which works wonder with your Mac.

We’d be more than happy to add an extra star in our list.

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14 productivity apps worthy of note

Maybe you’ve had people make fun of your love of productivity apps. Fear not; this is a safe space. (Haters gonna be—inefficient.) Some of my favorite productivity apps inhabit my Mac’s menu bar. Here are14 worthy of note.

In alphabetical order

1Password

Not really a menu bar app, but it lives in my menu bar. Anyway…you’re using a password manager, right? Right? I’ve been using 1Password almost since it was a baby, and I can’t imagine life without it. It’s so much more than passwords, too: you can store important documents, notes, files, credit cards, IDs, etc. It generates passwords for you, and it warns you when there’s been a hack or one of your passwords is old or weak. It’s cross-platform, cross device, and supports TouchID on the Mac. Super duper.

Alfred

I can’t imagine life without chocolate, coffee and Alfred. Truth. Alfred surpasses the Mac’s native Spotlight feature, but does so much more, especially if you use third-party workflows. Calculator, weather, search, shopping—these are just the tip of the productivity iceberg. (Like 1Password, Alfred’s menu bar app doesn’t do much other than get you to its prefs, but I wanted to give it a shout-out as a great productivity app.)

ColorSnapper

ColorSnapper is the best utility I’ve found for capturing colors anywhere onscreen. It copies color codes to your clipboard in any format you like, and stores them in a handy palette. Customizable keyboard shortcuts make grabbing colors a snap (sorry, couldn’t resist).

Best Mac Menu Bar Apps 2017 Youtube

Contrast

This one-trick pony is handy if you’re concerned about making sure your designs meet the accessibility standards outlined in the WCAG 2.0, and provide sufficient contrast for all users. And I know you are! You can use the color picker anywhere on your screen, or enter color codes manually. Little big detail: the left picker sets the widget’s text color, while the right picker sets the widget’s background color. Neat.

Craft

If your workflow includes Sketch + Invision, then Craft from Invision is a must-have plugin. A blurb can’t begin to do justice to all this hydra-like utility offers, so check it out for yourself. Note: like Alfred and 1Password, Craft’s menu bar widget is just a glorified preference pane, but worth knowing about.

2017

DayOne

I’ve always kept a journal, and for the past several years, I’ve done so with DayOne. It has support for multiple journals (for me it’s Ideas, Projects, Family, Personal), a beautiful UI, and cross-device syncing…what’s not to love? DayOne’s menu bar widget lets you make quick entries without bringing up the full app. And, you can set DayOne to remind you to make entries; when you do, the menu bar widget opens automatically to guilt you, er, prompt you, into writing something.

Dropbox

You’re probably thinking this is just another menu bar widget that doesn’t do much — and you’d mostly be right. Except that it’s a powerful shortcut for finding recent files. Much quicker than going to Finder anyway.

Droplr

I came late to the Droplr game. I wondered why people didn’t just stick files in Dropbox and share the link? But with TED’s corporate Droplr account, I had to give it a shot, and now I’m a convert. I’m Option-D’ing all over the place: in many apps and, of course, Finder, clicking Option-D uploads whatever you’ve selected automatically to Droplr, and generates a shareable URL that’s copied automatically to your clipboard. Multiple files are uploaded as an archive. On top of that, you can take and annotate screenshots, screencasts, and more. The menu bar widget offers shortcuts, as well as a recent history of items.

Fantastical

Apple’s Calendar app shed its Pleather™ skin years ago, but it still can’t compete with the admittedly pricey Fantastical. Not only is it a gorgeous app, Fantastical is feature-packed, but in an intuitive way. Each update offers useful, thoughtful improvements. And unlike some of the other menu bar apps I’ve mentioned here, Fantastical’s menu bar app is actually a full-fledged, miniature version of the full Fantastical app. You can search for or add events and reminders, and (natch) view your calendar. The menu bar window can be detached, and you can set it to float above other windows so it’s always present. I often use it instead of the full app, in fact.

LittleIpsum

Every decent designer knows you never, ever design until you have actual copy. HAHAHA-OMG-ROTFL-LMAO! Whew, that was fun! Anyway. For those times when you have to design without real copy, LittleIpsum is quite handy. It generates any amount of copy you want — specify number of words, sentences, or paragraphs — and it copies a plain text version right to your clipboard. This one-trick-pony rocks.

Noizio

Noizio is my favorite white noise app. It’s fun to mix your own ambient sounds. I mean, Deep Space + On The Farm + Coffee House? Sailing Yacht + Campfire? Oh, and there’s an iOS version, too.

Paste

Best Mac Menu Bar Apps 2019

I really shouldn’t include Paste in a write-up of menu bar apps because its widget really does nothing more than get you to its preferences. But damn, do I love Paste. It’s by far the best and most beautiful clipboard manager I’ve used. Paste has a customizable history; entries are stored in a very visual format; they can be filed for future reference; and it supports iCloud sync so you can access your history across devices. The only thing missing is a mobile version — and the developer says that’s in the works!

Best Mac Menu Bar Apps 2017 Android

Pixelwinch

Pixelwinch is a gem. Capture any portion of your screen and make pixel-perfect measurements of even the smallest interface elements. It stores a history of recent clippings, too.

PixelSnap

Update—19 Feb, 2018: Add another amazing screen measurement tool to my menubar arsenal: PixelSnap. Invoked by a system-wide hotkey, you can drag a marquee around anything on your screen (yes, anything), and PixelSnap will return the measurements instantly. It does a fantastic job finding boundaries, but you can adjust the settings if you like. It’s like magic! I find myself invoking PixelSnap more often than Pixel Winch, above, but one feature I like about Pixel Winch is its clipboard history. Caveat: PixelSnap isn’t cheap. Thanks for the tip, Steve.

Todoist

It kind of makes sense to close out a list of productivity apps with a to-do app. I’ve used them all—or most of them, anyway. Things was my favorite, but lack of a mobile version combined with infrequent updates caused me to bail. I left for Todoist, which is supported on any platform you can imagine (including a Web-based version). It’s one of those apps that can be deep or shallow, depending on your needs. (I’m somewhere in the middle). In this case, you could use it for everything from daily chores and reminders to light project management. Or both. The app gets frequent updates, and it features a fun little productivity Karma / leaderboard, if you’re into that kind of thing. (Again, the menu bar app is mostly prefs.)

2017

And finally…

Some random Mac menu bar facts:

  • You can set your menu bar to hidden. I have, and I love it: more screen!
  • You can invert the colors on your menu bar to create a dark mode. (I think it’s ugly.)
  • Option-clicking the Notification Center icon in the far right corner of the menu bar sets it to Do Not Disturb mode. (Why did I only learn this recently?)
  • If your menu bar becomes overpopulated, try Bartender, a handy little utility that lets you show or hide apps as you like.

So, what’s in your menu bar? I’d love to know.