Six Colors
Six Colors

Apple, technology, and other stuff

Support this Site

Become a Six Colors member to read exclusive posts, get our weekly podcast, join our community, and more!

By Jason Snell

Review: ‘Steve Jobs in Exile’ recounts Apple founder’s tough mid-career lessons

I recently got to read an advance copy of Geoffrey Cain’s new book, “Steve Jobs In Exile: The Untold Story of NeXT and the Remaking of an American Visionary,” which was published this week. It’s a surprising and sometimes gruesome (in a businessy way) story that does not show off the famous man at the center of the story as much as depict all the ways he failed in what turned out to be preparation for his career-defining role as Apple CEO. (I also got to interview Cain about the book this week on Upgrade.)

Contrary to popular opinion, Jobs did not get fired from Apple—he got parked in a useless role until he quit out of frustration, as Cain recounts. Jobs was motivated to start NeXT Computer for two reasons: He saw a potential market for a high-end workstation in education and industry, and he knew that this was a market Apple wasn’t especially interested in, so he could avoid expensive and distracting lawsuits with the company he was being pushed out of. (That didn’t work.)

As depicted in the book, the same cycle seems to repeat again and again. Out of the gate, Jobs decides what his new company will focus on by cannily identifying a potential market—the demand for “3M” machines, workstations with a megabyte of memory, a million-pixel display, and a processor capable of handling a million instructions per second. Scientists and researchers, Cain recounts, said they would buy them in large numbers—assuming they cost no more than about $10,000 each.

Then the second cycle happens: Jobs ends up getting focused on all sorts of little details that matter to him, but don’t necessarily serve the original product goal, from the design of the factory that would build the workstations to the expensive physical design of the workstations themselves, made unlike any other computer in existence.

The end result was pretty much what you’d expect: The computer that NeXT ended up building didn’t satisfy the requirements of those original higher-ed buyers who were the target market. Jobs had followed his bliss, and his good taste, in interesting directions. NeXT made an interesting product. But the product failed at being a successful product, just as NeXT kept failing at business.

And it just keeps happening, as the book details. Early investor and Jobs believer H. Ross Perot (yes, the former independent presidential candidate!) had ties in the government that would’ve allowed NeXT to sell computers to America’s intelligence agencies, primarily for spy-satellite image analysis. Jobs refused the lifeline, saying he didn’t want to do business with the government.

A deal with IBM had the potential for NeXT’s operating system to take the ecological niche of Microsoft Windows before it had been firmly established on the world’s PCs. Jobs decided he was uncomfortable working with IBM.

Time and again in “Steve Jobs in Exile,” you see Jobs act like his company’s own worst enemy. He makes decisions for perfectly understandable personal reasons, but they go against the entire premise of the company he had established. (How does a guy with a fundamentally anti-establishment worldview end up building a company designed for elite institutions, industry, and the government?) The situation at NeXT becomes increasingly untenable, and to Jobs’s credit, he does seem to have learned that his mistakes are what led the company to the cliff.

When Jobs discovered that a small piece of the overall NeXT software picture, WebObjects, had a potential market in revolutionizing early web commerce, he recognized it, and the company benefited. But you get the sense that Jobs was not comfortable changing the world of selling things on the Internet, when he really still wanted to change the world.

In the end, NeXT’s investment in a forward-looking Unix-based operating system underpinned by the Mach microkernel made it an acquisition target for Apple, which was desperately looking for a replacement for the classic Mac OS. The rest is history, though Cain points out just how dramatic and fraught the merger of the NeXT staff with Apple’s late-90s engineers really was.

If you think Jobs’s years at NeXT were some sort of graduate education in which he grew older and wiser so he could emerge, fully formed, as Apple CEO, you’ve got it wrong. As Cain expertly points out, the NeXT era was one in which Jobs was humbled again and again, until he started to realize that his instincts were not infallible, his distortion field did not reflect reality, and that he had to modify his behavior to have any hope of success. (In fact, Jobs’s greatest success during the period came with Pixar—where he had a much more hands-off relationship with the company’s executives.)

The Jobs who sold his company to Apple was not tanned, rested, and ready for action. He was beaten, battered, bruised, and humbled. But he had learned enough lessons that he was able to give Apple a better version of himself, the second time around.

[Steve Jobs In Exile (Portfolio), available at Amazon, Bookshop, and everywhere else.]


The apps we given up on, how often we go to the Apple Store, the first things we do on our phones every day, and our latest tech joys.


Dan shops for URLs, Lex makes a video and Moltz runes everything.


by Jason Snell

Apple Sports expands, readies for World Cup

Three smartphone screens display FIFA World Cup 2026 scores, standings, and lineups. Left: past matches. Middle: current lineup. Right: upcoming matches and knockout stages. Dark blue theme with team flags and player names.

Apple Sports got its World Cup update on Tuesday:

Apple Sports — the free app for iPhone that gives fans access to real-time scores, stats, and more — is now available to download on the App Store in more than 170 countries and regions around the world, including more than 90 newly added markets. Designed for speed and simplicity, the app delivers a personalized experience, putting fans’ favorite teams and leagues front and center with a simple, intuitive interface designed by Apple.

In addition to being available in 90 more regions, there are a bunch of nice soccer features, including a starting line-up, all geared toward this summer’s World Cup, which is less than a month away.


by Glenn Fleishman

Take Control live course helps you conquer Big Tech

Joe Kissell, the fellow behind Take Control Books, has a new, live course: Taming Big Tech. As a multi-decade writer and teacher, and someone deeply skeptical about the invasive power of the biggest technology firms in our life, Joe is aptly placed to offer rich, practical insight. The four roughly 90-minute sessions include time for questions from participants. The course starts May 23, 2026, and then takes place every two weeks through July 11. All sessions are recorded in case you miss one, or for later playback.

Joe’s covering a lot in this course, but you can distill it down to a few principles: how to ensure your private information remains under your control, what you can do (if you want) to migrate from Big Tech products and services to alternatives, and how to minimize or eliminate privacy risks. The course includes a discussion forum, downloadable PDFs, and optional homework and quizzes, which can be a useful way to ensure your understanding of material. I trust Joe’s insights and his teaching approach, not only because (disclosure) I’m the Executive Editor of Take Control Books, but because I’ve seen over that time how patient he is at explaining the frustrating things tech companies (including Apple) do to us, instead of for us.


By Shelly Brisbin

New Apple accessibility updates focus on Apple Intelligence

In a series of announcements that just might signal a wider focus on AI at the upcoming WWDC, on Tuesday Apple previewed upcoming accessibility features in the run-up to this week’s Global Accessibility Awareness Day.

VoiceOver and Magnifier will gain AI-powered features that can provide enhanced image description, using the device camera. VoiceOver’s Image Explorer will use Apple Intelligence to give more detailed descriptions of what’s in photographs, scanned documents and labels, for example.

Two iPhone screens: the left one shows a scanned bill, while the right shows a question about the bill, and its answer, provided by Magnifier.
Magnifier users will be able to scan a document, then ask questions about its contents, with answers provided by Apple Intelligence. The feature will also be available to VoiceOver users.

With updates to live recognition, VoiceOver users can press the iPhone action button to quickly ask a question about what’s in the camera viewfinder and get a detailed response. Users can also ask follow-up questions in their own words to get more visual information. These question features resemble what’s available to users of the Be My Eyes app’s Be My AI feature, but it’s unclear whether Apple’s offerings will go further.

Magnifier for iOS and Mac will include the same Apple Intelligence-powered options, which can be used with speech or high-contrast onscreen text. Magnifier users will also be able to speak to the app, to get more specific information about their surroundings, or to ask follow-up questions.

Voice Control is set to get an Apple Intelligence boost, giving users the ability to describe an element onscreen they want to act on, instead of using a numbered grid, or remembering an item’s label. The natural language support should also allow Voice Control users to navigate apps or elements that aren’t labeled for the feature.

Accessibility Reader, which renders onscreen text in ways that are visually more accessible, including larger fonts, high-contrast backgrounds, and clutter-free layouts, will provide AI-generated summaries on demand, and can translate text into the user’s chosen language.

AI-generated captions will be available alongside standard SDH and closed captions, and also in places where no captions are provided otherwise. They’ll be available on macOS, iOS, Apple TV and Vision Pro, and they can be styled to meet the viewer’s taste or needs.

Power wheelchair users looking for a reason to try Vision Pro might find one in this year’s accessibility announcements, especially if they use an alternative drive controls to steer the chair. Those who can’t use a standard joystick to navigate often employ sip-n-puff switches, head arrays or other devices. With this year’s updates, Vision Pro users will be able to use eye-tracking to control compatible alternative drive systems. At launch, Vision Pro will be compatible with TOLT and LUCI systems.

Other updates coming this year include motion cues for VisionOS, improved Apple device handoff for Made for iPhone hearing aids, larger text support in the tvOS interface and more.

Today’s preview marked the fifth straight year Apple has used GAAD week to preview accessibility features coming to its platforms in the fall. GAAD celebrates its fifteenth year.

[Shelly Brisbin is a radio producer and author of the book iOS Access for All. She's the host of Lions, Towers & Shields, a podcast about classic movies, on The Incomparable network.]


Stephen Hackett joins Jason to talk old Macs, binned chips, and Apple AI. Then Jason discusses the darkest part of Steve Jobs’s career with the author of “Steve Jobs In Exile”, Geoffrey Cain.


By Glenn Fleishman

FileVault keys can’t be escrowed in iCloud anymore

Glenn Fleishman, art by Shafer Brown

If you’ve enabled FileVault before macOS 26 Tahoe and used the option to escrow your key in iCloud, as of 26.4, you’ll be forced to migrate to a new, better, more secure method. Jason Snell just noted this update in his post about refreshed security. I wrote last September about how Tahoe shifted to storing the last-ditch account Recovery Key in Passwords starting with macOS 26.

In that column, I explained, “Your previous choices are preserved. If you wrote the key down or used iCloud escrow, this remains in place.” This is no longer the case! That article remains accurate and provides all the background and insight you need on using FileVault and the role of the Recovery Key.

However, when faced with the upgrade, you may appreciate a few tips and some advice.

You may not need FileVault

FileVault is not necessary for everyone. Apple encourages it, but enabling FileVault increases the odds that you might be locked out of your Mac forever should something go wrong. What is that something? If I could predict that, I wouldn’t be any richer, but you’d all be happier, as would Apple.

The something arises from FileVault’s two-part boot process, which uses a thin layer that requires a Mac account password to unlock your drive. There’s an “opportunity,” shall we say, for that data to corrupt for whatever reason. The Recovery Key bypasses the password requirement, uses a long code stored securely to let you in, and then resets your password.

You might also somehow forget your login password! Unlikely, but I have had times in the past when I used only a memorized password, and my fingers kept the muscle knowledge, and my brain apparently did not. I lost the thread of it, and couldn’t remember what to enter anymore! I have taken measures to prevent this since, but it isn’t impossible.

Fail to have a password or access to your Recovery Key, and you’re locked out forever. Apple can’t recover this data.

If you don’t use FileVault, you don’t need to worry about that at all. Consider your risk profile—are you concerned that someone other than you (or an authorized person) might have physical access to your Mac, and be able to bypass macOS’s login to read the drive directly? That is a big lift for anything but motivated cryptocurrency thieves or a government. If so, FileVault is a valuable add-on, a good complement to Lockdown Mode: FileVault hardens your Mac against local attempts to get into its contents; Lockdown Mode resists many common remote methods of malicious intrusion and phishing.

If not, you can rely on built-in encryption and the physical security of someone having to get to your machine to try to crack it.

But if you like or need the protection of FileVault, perhaps because you travel with a laptop or work in a sensitive industry or carry sensitive data, read on.

Practical upgrading insight

The previous column covers all the basics and the, er, advanceds, but as you migrate, consider these items:

  • Found in passwords: Recovery Key is now stored in Passwords. Search for “recovery key” or the model name listed in Settings: General: About in the Name field. (Changing the name doesn’t update the Passwords entry.) If you don’t see an entry in Passwords, try resetting FileVault (see below).
The Passwords app filtered by a search for “recovery,” with a Mac Studio Recovery Key entry selected.
The Recovery Key entry in Passwords identifies the Mac by its model, and provides a shortcut to FileVault settings.
  • Persistently available: The key is persistently available in the Mac interface, too, either by using Touch ID or entering your password in Settings: Privacy & Security: FileVault and clicking Show.
Dialog titled “Write Down Your Recovery Key” showing a partially blurred FileVault Recovery Key, with explanatory text noting that Apple does not have access to the key, and a Done button.
You can click Show to display the Recovery Key dialog in Tahoe’s FileVault setting.
  • Backup your backup: Because you can no longer store your key in iCloud, it is critical that you have some means of using Passwords on a 26 or later operating system version to regain access to your Mac account if your login fails. You may want to store the key in another password management system, like 1Password, if that would increase your odds of gaining access to it. If you can’t use your password to log in and you can’t access your Recovery Key, you will be locked out of that data forever.
  • Older devices can’t see the key: Any of your iCloud-linked devices not yet running iOS 26, iPadOS 26, or macOS 26 will be unable to view the Recovery Key in Passwords (or equivalent in Safari in older versions of macOS).

Resetting FileVault

In my case, I’d upgraded to the new method back in 26.0, writing about it here and upgrading my book Take Control of Securing Your Apple Devices. When I went to check just now—with 26.5 installed—the FileVault view said I had FileVault enabled. However, the Show button was grayed out, and Passwords didn’t show an entry for this computer.

I fixed it in this way:

  1. Disable FileVault.
  2. Click Turn Off Encryption. (You may be prompted to enter your password.)
  3. Enable FileVault. (You may be prompted again, but probably not.)

The entry now appears in Passwords.

The FileVault pane in System Settings with FileVault enabled, showing a Password Reset section and a Recovery Key row whose Show button is grayed out, despite the message “A recovery key has been set.”
Despite FileVault reporting a Recovery Key is set, my Show button was unavailable—the anomaly that prompted me to disable and re-enable FileVault.

Note also that Apple continues to show outdated text in this section: “FileVault secures your data by encrypting the contents of your Mac and locking your screen with a password.” All M-series Macs and all Intel Macs with a T2 Security Chip encrypt the contents of the startup drive by default. FileVault layers startup protection on top of that. So Apple may require this mandatory security change, but it fails to explain it correctly.

[Got a question for the column? You can email glenn@sixcolors.com or use /glenn in our subscriber-only Discord community.]

[Glenn Fleishman is a printing and comics historian, Jeopardy champion, and serial Kickstarterer. His latest book, which you can pre-order, is Flong Time, No See. Recent books are Six Centuries of Type & Printing and How Comics Are Made.]


By John Moltz

This Week in Apple: Silent consonants and partners

John Moltz and his conspiracy board. Art by Shafer Brown.

Good people release good apps, OpenAI has complaints and Apple comes to the aid of some frenemies.

G as in Indigo

Remember when tech coverage was mostly just talking about cool new hardware and software and not about politics, AI, and the decline of civilization? Well, this week brought back a bit of that as two cool new apps were released.

Friend of the column Lex Friedman released Gnome, a delightful tool that makes it quicker and easier to find just the right GIF for any occasion. (Disclaimer: I am deep in the pocket of Big Lex.)

Meanwhile, Aaron Vegh and Ben McCarthy released Indigo, an app that unifies your Mastodon and Bluesky timelines, thus reducing the amount of madness in your life.

Check ‘em out.

Sometimes running to the press does nothing at all

A blockbuster report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman who talked to a kid whose uncle works at OpenAI and he says Apple is in biiig trouble.…

This is a post limited to Six Colors members.



By Jason Snell

Apple escalates macOS defenses while honoring its open nature

Two alert dialogs on a Mac screen.
Gatekeeper gets in the way of non-notarized software.

One of the big differences between the Mac and Apple’s other platforms is that, by design, it’s an old-school “general computing” platform—you can install and run whatever software you want, from any source.

That’s a good thing. It’s what makes the Mac the Mac. But it also makes the Mac more vulnerable than Apple’s other platforms, where the company can strictly limit what software is allowed to run on the device behind layers of developer memberships, code signing, scanning, and App Store approval.

For the last decade or more, as the Mac has become more popular, Apple has been trying to ratchet up Mac security. But because the Mac is open, securing it brings some unique challenges, as I found out when I got a chance to discuss these issues with some members of Apple’s security team recently.

Back in 2018, the company introduced notarization for apps, a system that used developer code signing and automated scans to provide a slightly increased level of scrutiny and security. While you can run apps that aren’t notarized on your Mac, it’s become increasingly difficult to do so—on purpose.

That’s because as Apple gradually ratchets up its Mac security approach, it’s increasingly playing a game of Whac-a-Mole with malware makers and scammers who are trying to take advantage of Mac users. Adding notarization made it harder for users to install malware without taking additional steps, so scammers switched to social engineering, talking users through the process of bypassing the warnings for non-notarized software. Apple eventually made bypassing the warnings so onerous that most scammers moved on.

They generally moved on… to the Terminal, which is why macOS 26.4 introduced warnings about code being pasted into Terminal. Scammers were giving users long strings of mostly unreadable code to paste into Terminal to “fix” problems—and this code would, when entered, grant permission and download software. In 26.4, Apple looks for specific strings on the clipboard and blocks them with a warning—while also looking for the presence of various developer tools on the system as an indicator that the user is more sophisticated and therefore the blocking should be a bit more lenient. It’s a clever approach to spare confused novice users without getting in the way of more expert ones. (Malicious AppleScript scripts are also being checked these days. You can’t be too careful.)

Apple has also, over the years, increased Mac security by structuring the way macOS is stored on disk. Much of the operating system is stored on sealed volumes that are cryptographically signed, meaning they can’t be tampered with. System Integrity Protection prevents tampered OS versions from booting. Drivers have been moved into limited-access user areas, out of full-access admin areas. Admin users, who used to have ultimate power (without ultimate responsibility), are now more limited in what they can do.

A few years ago, I complained that Apple’s warning dialogs were out of control, especially when migrating to a new system. Since then, Apple has made a bunch of improvements, including honoring many older permissions choices when migrating. The security team seems to have also acknowledged that there are certain circumstances where installing a lot of software might not be as big a security threat. That’s why during the first 24 hours of setting up a new machine, Apple’s security warnings are now throttled.

Among other recent changes in macOS 26 updates are new background security improvements that allow Apple to install small updates in the background between normal system updates.

And as our own Glenn Fleishman reported last year, Apple began syncing FileVault keys via iCloud. What began as a gentle roll-out is now mandatory in macOS 26.4, where all users who are syncing FileVault keys will have them stored via this method.

The Mac is never going to be as secure as iOS, and that’s okay. That extra insecurity is the trade-off for the Mac being an open system, and that’s what makes the Mac special. In 2018, at WWDC, I watched as a representative of Apple’s security team stood on stage and promised that Apple would never prevent Mac users from running any code they wanted. He never promised it would always be easy, and it’s not—but that promise has been kept, and I get no sense that Apple envisions a world where it will ever be broken.

In the meantime, the good news: When you consider that the game of Whac-a-Mole has reached the “paste long strings of text into the Terminal” phase, it makes you wonder how desperate those scammers have gotten. Maybe after years of ratcheting up security, Apple’s made it just too hard to talk users into installing malware on their Macs. That has required a lot of extra effort that’s not necessary on the iOS side—and I’m glad Apple is making that effort to keep the Mac as safe as possible while it still remains open.


By Jason Snell

Indigo unifies the Mastodon and Bluesky timelines

Indigo, from Soapbox Software, is a new social media client that combines Bluesky and Mastodon timelines in one place. I’ve been using it for the last month or so as my primary social-media client—and it’s so good that I’ve largely stopped using individual clients dedicated to the two services.

Screenshot of a social media app showing tweets on a phone and tablet. Tweets discuss computer screens, real estate, and videos. Includes user profiles, timestamps, and engagement icons.

Indigo makes it easy to cross-post to the services, which is unsurprising given its pedigree—its creators, Aaron Vegh and Ben Rice McCarthy, made the cross-posting app Croissant before they made this. Since the services offer different character limits, Indigo shows you countdowns for both in one place. The app offers some other cross-service niceties, like identifying very similar posts on both services and de-duping them—though I still see not-quite-identical posts from time to time.

Indigo excels at scrolling through a timeline. Get too far beyond that, though, and you’ll find that it’s still definitely a 1.0 product. There’s no way to search within your timeline, tapping to expose an entire thread can be very slow, there’s no support for Bluesky lists, mute filters aren’t applied immediately to all items in a timeline, and occasionally I found that it just wouldn’t let me interact with some posts until I quit and re-launched the app. I also found the app’s choice of colors—blue for Bluesky, purple for Mastodon—to be impossible for me to differentiate as a colorblind person. (Fortunately you can add a badge on each account’s avatar, but it would sure be nice to pick a better color scheme.)

While I prefer Indigo because I want to scroll a timeline once and only once, it’s not yet at the level of a dedicated app like Tapbots’s Ivory for Mastodon. But this is a brand-new app, so I accept that it’s got room to grow. Ben Rice McCarthy has a nice blog post about how the project came to be, and another about how its design evolved.

Indigo is available for free on the App Store. For the Ultraviolet level, which allows interaction with posts, you can pay $5/month, $35/year, or $120 for a one-time purchase.


Our thoughts on Google’s Chromebook replacement, the dedicated hardware we use instead of our phones, the accessibility features we rely on, and whether we’re still using VR for anything.


By Jason Snell for Macworld

35 years ago, the Mac got an era-defining upgrade

Screenshot of a 1990s computer interface showing Microsoft Excel and Word. Excel grid on right, Word document on left. Toolbar at top with icons for editing and formatting. 'Microsoft Excel 4.0' box with app icons in center.
Multitasking! Aliases! File sharing! System 7 had it all.

A lot of Mac users don’t remember a time before Mac OS X (or macOS, or OS X, depending on the era), but before OS X arrived on the scene, the Mac ran on an entirely different operating system, the classic Mac OS, which was with us from the Mac’s launch in 1984 through the funeral Steve Jobs held for Mac OS 9 in 2002.

The original Mac OS evolved a lot across those 18 years. And perhaps its single most important update, System 7, arrived 35 years ago this month, in May of 1991.

It seems like a footnote now, but so much of what we take for granted on the Mac today was introduced in System 7. Take it from someone who was there—I wanted System 7 so badly, I downloaded a load of floppy disk images across my college computer network so I could install it. And I wasn’t disappointed by what I got. System 7 really did show the way to the future of the Mac.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦



by Jason Snell

Get GIFs fast with Gnome

Screenshot of a search for 'spiderman' showing cartoon images of Spider-Man pointing, kicking, tugging, and webbing, along with a cute cartoon and a movie scene. Text includes 'pointing spiderman,' 'kick spiderman,' etc.

My friend Lex Friedman wrote an app, Gnome, that makes it easy to post GIFs:

Gnome lives in your Mac’s menubar. You hit a hotkey. A little search window appears. You type what you’re looking for — weird al, shrug, nailed it, that’s a paddlin’ — and a grid of GIFs appears. Click the one you want. It’s now on your clipboard. Paste it wherever you were typing. Joke saved. World improved.

My favorite bit: You can also add in a local folder of GIFs, so your own go-tos are always at the ready, in addition to stuff from the wider Internet.

Maybe my second favorite bit:

Wait, why is the app called Gnome? Because that’s how I pronounce the “G” in “GIF.”

The app costs $7, one time, to unlock everything. Otherwise, after five minutes you’ll be limited to “Weird Al” and Rick Astley GIFs. I’m not kidding.



By Glenn Fleishman

How I restarted using RSS, and actually noticed!

Recently, I tripped over a headline for an article I wrote for Six Colors in 2015: “How I stopped using RSS and didn’t even notice.”

I could hardly remember writing it. But write it I did, at a time when we were deep in a news-aggregation desert. It seemed like RSS had experienced a conceptual death, through neglect and intent. Google first hijacked usage by creating Google Reader during RSS’s heyday in 2005, which sank the market for paid RSS apps and led to near hegemony for Google.

Then, typical of fickle Google, the company killed off Google Reader in 2013. Because Google Reader was web-based, its loss revealed a barren marketplace. Small developers tried to fill the gap, but the pattern of usage for many people had ended.

Couple that with the emergence, by that time, of the expectation of very low prices for single-purpose apps, and little chance yet of convincing people to pay for a recurring subscription. RSS readers persisted, but it seemed like their time had come and gone.

But I was too pessimistic! Today, I’m back to daily—or multiple-times-per-day—use of a newsreader, the same one that got me addicted back in the early 2000s. Hurray, I’m an RSS news junkie again!?

Screenshot of Netnewswire 2, showing a list of feeds at left, items at top right, and the contents of a post at bottom right
NetNewsWire remains true to RSS and its identity, as you can see from this version 2 screenshot.

Continue reading “How I restarted using RSS, and actually noticed!”…


By Dan Moren

Bartender 6’s new pro feature turns the MacBook notch into a dynamic peninsula

The battle for the Mac menu bar has raged for decades, and shows no signs of letting up.

As the number of apps and controls in the menu bar have continued to proliferate, users have had to constantly find ways to keep them in check. For years, the de facto solution was the Mac app Bartender, but after an awkwardly managed ownership transition in 2024, a slew of alternatives sprouted up to take on the venerable utility and vie for the crown.

The team behind Bartender has continued to plug away, however, and the latest release is Bartender 6, which not only continues the app’s legacy of menu bar management, but also extends into an interesting new area: the omnipresent notch of the MacBook.

Bartender menu bar floating off the main Mac menu bar.
Bartender’s menu bar management is about the same as it has always been.

The menu bar management options haven’t changed much from Bartender 5 to 6; you’ll find all your usual options, including the ability to customize layout, behavior, and look and feel.

There’s also beta feature called Widgets, which lets you make your own menu bar items with a plug-and-play interface that feels like a combination of Shortcuts and Yahoo Pipes. It’s interesting but feels more than a little underbaked at present; I had a hard time getting it do anything that it was supposed to do, including simply showing the current CPU usage. With some more work, it might be more competitive with the likes of SwiftBar, but right now, it’s a beta in the classical sense.

Screenshot of a widget editor with a CPU usage widget. The widget displays CPU usage percentage and has options for image, displayed text, left click, right click, activate, show, and hide. The editor interface includes a sidebar with widget categories and a right panel with actions and menu items.
Making your own menu bar icons seems natural for Bartender, but the feature needs improvement.

Bartender 6 is available as a four-week trial; after that time you’ll need to buy a full license for $20, though generous upgrade pricing is available for owners of previous versions. If you purchased Bartender 5 in 2025, you can even upgrade for free. Note that Bartender 6 does require macOS Sonoma or later and that if you do update from 5 to 6, your settings won’t transfer—the developers say this is because of changes in Tahoe, but it’s a shame they didn’t provide an export/import option.

If that were the whole story, it might make Bartender 6 an unremarkable update. However, in addition to all of those features, there’s also Bartender Pro, a $15/year subscription that promises not only all future Bartender updates, but also advanced features, starting with what it dubs Top Shelf.

Continue reading “Bartender 6’s new pro feature turns the MacBook notch into a dynamic peninsula”…



Search Six Colors