2019 is coming to a close in just a few days, and we thought we’d share some of our favorite apps this year.
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Over the course of the 2019, we’ve highlighted useful Mac and iOS apps primarily picked out by MacRumors readers in a YouTube series. For today’s video, we’ve rounded up five iOS apps and five Mac apps that MacRumors readers found most useful from those videos.
Mac Apps
- One Switch ($4.99) – One Switch is a Mac menu bar app that adds various switches to the Mac’s menu bar. You can add toggles that will do things like hide desktop options, activate dark mode, keep the Mac awake, connect to headphones, toggle on Do Not Disturb, activate Night Shift, bring up the Screen Saver, and more. Options are customizable so you can make your One Switch menu do just want you need.
- Stack (Free) – Stack is a Mac app that’s sort of an internet launchpad for web apps, describing itself as an “internet OS.” It houses all the websites you might want to keep tabs on like Facebook, Messenger, Gmail, Slack, and more, keeping them in one convenient place. You can organize your different apps into categories, and the app provides unified notifications so you don’t miss anything.
- Pock (Free) – Pock is a simple app that’s designed to make your Touch Bar more useful by adding your dock to your Touch Bar so you can quickly access your apps and even files within folders. The Pock options are customizable, so you can choose what you need most, adding options like a now playing widget for controlling music, a status widget for getting info like WiFi connection of battery level, and more.
- Moom ($9.99) – Moom is designed to let you quickly and easily move and resize windows on your Mac. It has preset sizes and locations, and also lets you draw grids to create custom window display sizes. There are also custom controls for moving, zooming, moving windows to a secondary display, centering, resizing and more, and window layouts can be saved.
- Little Snitch ($45) – Little Snitch monitors all of the traffic on your Mac so you can see what apps are sending data, and where. It basically makes all of your Internet connections visible and gives you control over them, letting you approve or restrict what’s being sent from your Mac. There’s a world map so you can see where connections are being made, and there are modes for getting instant notifications or letting it run in the background.
iOS Apps
- Spotify Stations (Free) – Spotify Stations is a standalone Spotify app that came out earlier this year. It’s designed to let you create radio stations based on your favorite songs and artists, much like Pandora. Radio stations in Spotify aren’t new, but Spotify Stations makes the feature a lot easier to use.
- Microsoft Math Solver (Free) – For our readers still in school, we wanted to highlight Microsoft Math Solver, which is a super handy app that can help you with math problems. Microsoft Math Solver lets you write a math problem on screen or use the camera to snap a photo of a problem and it provides you with a step-by-step explanation on how to solve it. The app can also generate similar math problems so you can practice. It works with elementary math, pre-algebra, algebra, word problems, basic calculus, and statistics.
- Halide ($5.99) – Halide is a camera app that offers up full manual controls for shutter speed, ISO, and white balance, along with a live histogram for perfecting exposure. The swipe-based interface is easy to use, and you can capture photos in RAW, JPG, TIFF, or HEIC formats. There are depth controls for newer iPhones, manual and autofocus tools, and for iPhone XR, there’s a Depth Capture feature that works with pets, food, and other items, unlike the native Depth Control feature.
- Unsplash (Free) – Unsplash is a community-based image sharing app that provides royalty-free photographs for you to use as wallpaper or for other purposes. It’s not focused solely on wallpapers, but there’s an interesting range of content and a huge number different options. There are featured categories along with a robust search tool for finding just what you’re looking for. Along with an iOS app, Unsplash also has a website so you can get Mac wallpapers too.
- What the Golf? (Free, but requires Apple Arcade) – Apple Arcade, which offers tons of games for $4.99 per month, is a great deal, and we’ve come across quite a few games that make the subscription price worth it. One such game is What the Golf, a fun action game that takes golf to new places. What the Golf is described as the game for people who hate golf, so don’t let the name fool you – this is a fun little game where the goal is to get an object (not always a golf ball) to a hole. There are fun puns, silly levels, ragdoll mechanics, and genuinely difficult content to contend with. It’s the perfect game to pick up for a few minutes when waiting in line.
What were your favorite Mac and iOS apps in 2019? Let us know in the comments.