Anyway, after 15.4 update yesterday a lot of things are misbehaving for me including miraculous battery drains.
Not sure what a good solution there is.
https://community.folivora.ai/t/reduce-menu-bar-icon-spacing...
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40584606
Ice (mentioned several times on this page) is the open source replacement.
Still no individual’s names or contact info on the website.
I am a paying user who uninstalled the app from all my Macs and replaced with ice.
Ice lacks my favorite bartender feature (show the extended app bar when mouse hovering over the camera island) but I still prefer it to a shady alternative.
[1] https://kagi.com/search?q=strongbox+site%3Anews.ycombinator....
Is there a way to hide the items from the dock and just have them in the menu bar?
Now that apps are digitally signed, it might require a few more hoops to manipulate the app. (Your Mac protects you from running tampered apps.)
Plus, it can stay quiet and only show icons when there’s a message, so it’s not in your face all the time.
btw. I'm starting to think xbar might be abandoned - it hasn’t seen updates in a while.
Every background service wants some screen estate in the menu bar, but the app that I need is always hidden behind the notch of my MacBook. Why can’t I hide the ones I don’t frequently need?
It's insane to grant that just to move some icons around.
I get why they need the permission to implement their cutesy drag and drop interface.
But I'd like to hear why these apps can't continue to hide menu icons after you've revoked the permission. Ice and Bartender at least require you to grant it at all times last I looked a few months ago.
To be honest it seems crazy at this point an overflow for menu bar items isn't built into macOS, especially now that all their laptops have this notch that can hide menu bar items if you have too many. Plus it competes with space with the dropdown menu items on the left since if an app has too many they'll wrap to the other side of the notch.
Maybe I can redeem myself by clarifying that the real frustration here is with bad macOS UX, not people trying to hack around it. I barked up the wrong tree.
Calling it out only because I don’t see it mentioned - until last year, Bartender was one of the popular go-to tools to manage menu bar items, but it fell from favor after quietly changing owners, changing certs, general shadiness https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/psa-bartender-mac-app-u...
A specific and relevant reminder why open source is so important for system utilities.
[1] https://i.imgur.com/0AFL1rU.png [2] https://awaremac.com/
https://badgeify.app/how-to-fix-mac-menu-bar-icons-disappear...
I use a combo of xbar [1] and Menubarx [2]. I used to have several widgets just for system stats but eventually moved to mac-stats [3] for that.
Tons of apps like Bartender or Ice can hide icons, but adding the ones I actually want? That’s what Badgeify do.
Tired: “maybe you should rename X to Y”; lacks an explanation of why, ‘maybe’ is often sneering / condescending in this usage, assumes that proposed solution is correct
Wired: “fyi there’s a copy error on the site: X doesn’t match Z, should it be Y?”; explains the problem, asks if theorized solution is correct, makes proposing a solution optional
The chosen example tone is not intended as a reflection or judgment of you in any regard, but the necessity of this disclaimer supports my point.
I don't really mind the downvotes, just pointing out how stupid they are. I just think of them as cowardly anonymous idiots and go about my (otherwise awesome) day.