You now have full control over your entries, without losing what matters.
What's new: Edit your entries anytime Move entries to trash instead of deleting them permanently Restore deleted entries within a recovery window Better control and safety for your writing New hint to discover long-press options
1.3.0 shipped two weeks ago. The headline change is that large files now preview instantly thanks to smart pagination, covering Code, CSV, SQLite, and Diff. A few other improvements worth calling out:
Mermaid engine upgraded with XY Chart support and faster rendering
New Diagnostics tool in the Help menu to check and repair QuickLook issues
Reading position memory with Off, Session, and Persistent options
Coming up next: metadata preview for .app, .ipa, .pkg, .dmg, .torrent, and configuration profiles. Sandbox, notarization, and signing info, all from the spacebar.
OptiClear is officially live, and while the current cleanup tools are saving tons of GBs, I m already looking at the roadmap for the next big update. I want to build what you actually need.
Which of these features would make your Mac life easier?
1 Duplicate Finder: Find and remove those annoying identical files & photos. 2 Uninstaller Improvements: A more powerful way to wipe every trace of deleted apps. 3 Cloud Storage Cleaner: Scanning and managing large files in iCloud/Google Drive. 4 Performance Monitor: A real-time dashboard for RAM and CPU health.
We all know that feeling when the UI starts lagging just a tiny bit, or apps take 2 seconds longer to open.
Most of the time, it's not the processor it's the disk struggling with thousands of tiny cache files and logs. I built OptiClear to be a 'one-click refresh' for this exact reason.
Aside from cleaning your disk, what s your go-to trick to bring that "New Mac" speed back?
A full restart?
PRAM / SMC reset?
Or just finally closing those 50+ Chrome tabs you ve been ignoring?
Hey everyone! With the landscape for building voice agents shifting lately, it feels like we re moving away from heavy, manual API orchestration toward something more streamlined.
How you re currently architecting voice agents. Specifically: Have you used the Model Context Protocol (MCP) to build or provide real-time data/context to your voice agents? Does it actually streamline your tool-calling, or is it more trouble than it's worth?
Would love to hear what's working (and what's breaking) in your current workflow. Drop your thoughts below!