Bartender is an award-winning app for macOS that for more than 10 years has superpowered your menu bar, giving you total control over your menu bar items, what's displayed, and when, with menu bar items only showing when you need them.
Bartender improves your workflow with quick reveal, search, custom hotkeys and triggers, and lots more.
Lightning-fast access to your menu bar items is now even better. Get instant access to your hidden menu bar items simply by swiping or scrolling in the menu bar, clicking on the menu bar, or if you prefer, simply hovering.
Access the menu bar items otherwise hidden by the notch on MacBook Air and Pro screens. Bartender will automatically hide your currently shown menu bar items when needed to create room to show the items hidden by the MacBook Air and Pro screens notch, giving you access to all your menu bar items.
Make your menu bar your own, with menu bar styling you can:
Combine multiple menu bar items into one customisable menu bar item, and have quick access to all the menu bar items within.
For example group all your cloud drive apps together like Dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive.
Have a group for connection related items such as Wi-Fi and VPN.
And another for media related items, like volume, media controls, airplay.
This can be a great way to have access to all your menu bar items on a MacBook Pro or Air with limited menu bar space due to the screen notch.
Create as many presets as you want and always have the right menu bar items available for your current workflow.
Show the macOS default menu bar items when recording your screen or screen sharing
Show work specific menu bar items in work hours, then social media items when at home... the possibilities are endless.
Presets can be automatically applied via triggers and also by macOS Focus modes.
With a completely new Trigger system
you can apply a preset automatically, or show a set of menu bar items whenever your trigger conditions are met. Triggers conditions currently include
Reduce the space between menu bar items using Bartender, allowing you to have more menu items onscreen before reaching the macbook notch. Or just purely for style.
Quick Search will change the way you use your menu bar apps.
Instantly find, show, and activate menu bar items, all from your keyboard.
* the macOS screen capture menu bar item can show when using this. more info
Bartender 5 is designed for all the great changes in macOS Sonoma.
Bartender 5 runs native and lightning-fast on Apple Silicon and Intel macs.
Create your own menu bar items
With Bartender widgets you can create your very own custom menu bar items, that trigger pretty much any action you want, no coding required.
Add hotkeys for any menu bar item; this can show and activate any menu bar item via any hotkey you assign.
With Spacers, your menu bar is uniquely your own, with the ability to customize menu item grouping and display labels or emojis to personalize your menu bar.
Use Apple Script to show and activate menu bar items. Fantastic for some advanced workflows.
Swap shown items for your hidden ones to take up less menu bar space, allowing you to have more menu bar items on a smaller screen.
You can choose where new menu items will appear in your menu bar, shown for instant access, or hidden for less distraction.
Then the servers went quiet. The rights expired. The corporate giants swallowed the indie distributors. FilmHit became a 404 error.
FilmHit was the digital equivalent of the dusty "Staff Picks" shelf at a video rental store. It didn't care about what was trending on Twitter. It cared about texture . filmhit
Before the era of algorithmic haze and the great consolidation of content, there was FilmHit . If you were a certain kind of movie obsessive in the late 2010s, you remember the feeling. Then the servers went quiet
But for those who were there, it remains a legend. It proved that the love of film isn't about quantity. It’s about the hit —the moment a forgotten movie reaches out of the screen and grabs you by the throat. FilmHit was the dealer, and we were happy junkies, chasing the perfect frame. FilmHit became a 404 error
On FilmHit, you didn't find the Marvel blockbuster. You found the 1978 Polish sci-fi movie that inspired it. You didn't find the Oscar winner for Best Picture; you found the film that was robbed of the Oscar in 1967. It was a graveyard of forgotten gems and a nursery for cult classics.
The best feature was the "Double Feature" randomizer. Press a button, and the algorithm—if you could call it that—paired two movies by mood, not by genre. You’d get The Shining paired with The Shining ? No. You’d get The Shining paired with The Father —a gut-punch night of psychological unraveling about isolation and memory. It understood cinema as a language, not just content.
It wasn’t Netflix. It wasn’t sleek. The interface was clunky, loaded with a font that looked like it belonged on a DVD menu from 2003. The search bar was temperamental—typing "The Godfather" sometimes brought up a Romanian documentary about pigeons instead. But that was the charm.