Find Discounted Mac Apps in the New BundleHunt App Bundle
Everyone loves a good suite of apps, and BundleHunt – the creator of this suite for your Mac – has released a new holiday suite of apps. Have fun because you have a total of 46 apps to choose from at a significant discount.
How does the bundle work?
First, a few words about setting up BundleHunt. Unlike a traditional “app bundle ” like what you’ll find at a place like Humble Bundle , you don’t pay a single price to unlock multiple apps. Rather, you pay two prices: a $ 5 fee to access the big BundleHunt discounts, and separate fees depending on how many apps you choose to purchase.
In other words, BundleHunt forces you to create your own discounted suite of apps, rather than just giving you one to buy. This means you’ll have to make some choices – and probably do a little research – to get the best deals. Here are a few tips to get you started (prices listed as “original> discounts”):
iMazing (45> $ 7)
Not everyone uses iCloud to back up their iPhone or iPad. If you’re in the “plug it in my Mac and let iTunes do wonders” type of thing , you will definitely want to give iMazing a try . This app is like iTunes without any media content. You get a faster way to create more complex backups for your iPhone or iPad – which you can even schedule if you remember to regularly connect your device to your Mac – as well as a tool that allows you to transfer data back and forth more easily (including photos , music, notes, voice memos, etc.).
Most importantly, iMazing allows you to copy the entire contents of one device to another, which makes updating from something old to something new significantly faster compared to restoring from an iCloud backup over Wi-Fi. You can also choose which data you want to transfer to your new device.
CloudMounter ($ 45> $ 1.50)
Managing files across the many cloud services you use can be a real challenge. With CloudMounter, you can access your data on many major cloud services from the standard Finder window. CloudMounter supports Dropbox, Amazon S3, Google Drive, Box, and OneDrive, just to name a few.
ScreenFocus ($ 8> $ 1)
If you’re fancy enough to have a multi-monitor setup at home, or at least a secondary monitor that you sometimes use alongside your laptop’s built-in screen, then ScreenFocus is a great way to keep secondary screens from distractions. you (too much).
Install it and the app will automatically dim your other screens. Hover your mouse over one of them and they will become brighter again. You can adjust the amount of dimming – and whether it should be instant or “instant” – in the app’s settings.
Tactile Touch Bar ($ 5> $ 1)
We’ve reviewed this little gem before , and it’s still a worthy addition to the Touch Bar with MacBook Pro support. Install the Haptic Touch Bar and you will now receive physical feedback – a vibration that you can customize – whenever you press the number keys on your MacBook Pro’s touch bar. Why Apple hasn’t built this feature right into macOS we’ll never know.
X-Mirage ($ 16> $ 2)
You can use Apple AirPlay to send videos from your iPhone or iPad to Apple TV, or to stream music to HomePod or other AirPlay-enabled speakers, but you can’t stream anything from your device to your Mac desktop or laptop. After all, these are not AirPlay receivers.
To fix this, you’ll need an app like X-Mirage that lets you mirror your iPhone or iPad’s screen to a Mac, stream videos or music, or play iOS games on a screen much larger than your tiny or decent-sized iPhone. iPad. If you want to go crazy, you can even use AirPlay on your Mac from multiple iPhones or iPads at the same time.