![]() Alongside MeetingBar it’s so incredibly useful. Its圜al is a tiny calendar that shows you the days of the month and all your events. ![]() You can get it from GitHub or from the Mac App Store. It supports every meeting service you’d imagine (and if it doesn’t support yours, you can request it here).Īnd, again, it’s free and open source, licensed under Apache 2.0. It connects to your calendars to show you what meetings you’ve got coming up next, and let’s you join them in one-click. MeetingBar is a true lifesaver, especially in the crazy world of remote-meetings-all-day-long that we live in now. This one costs $7 and is available on the Mac App Store. Just use the eyedropper tool straight from your menubar to check the text colours you’re designing with aren’t too light. It’s super easy to use and works in any application you might be using. This is a must for designers, marketers, bloggers - and really, for anyone making content that is seen by others. Contrast #Ĭontrast is an app for checking colour contrast ratios, ensuring that colours used meet accessibility guidelines. It’s open source, licensed under the MIT license, and can be installed from GitHub or the Mac App Store. You can set it to automatically hide them after a while, too. I love its approach: icons are dragged behind a divider, and can then be toggled on and off using an arrow. I’ve never tried Bartender, as its $15, and used Vanilla for a while (which is free but has a $10 pro option for all features) before discovering this alternative. Hidden Bar is an ultra lightweight app similar to Vanilla or Bartender, which allows you to hide or remove icons in your menu bar, keeping it looking clean. (Stick around to read about what they all do in detail, and why I love them so much.) I recently got a new Macbook for work, and these are some of the first apps I installed.
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