![]() ![]() The app comes as a free demo version for 15 days, then you’ll have to purchase a license at $10. I’m sure you’ll eventually find 4 items you like and keep them in the menubar all the time. Please note that Mac App Store version of iStat Menus does not contain frequency monitoring support. There’s so much about iStat Menus that you really have to try it yourself and play around with all the options. To enable CPU frequency monitoring in iStat Menus, please download and install Intel Power Gadget, then restart your Mac. Hopefully an update will bring a simple black one. I also have a nice calendar icon in this way, but it’s red. Personally, I’ve removed Apple’s battery and clock item to use iStat’s one. When anythings wrong with your Mac, or you think that the machine is too hot, iStat Menus is how you can track down what that is with more sensors and data than you thought possible. There’s so much stuff to look at and set in the Preferences I can’t really cover all in a single post, but you can take a look at the screenshots to have an idea. If it’s the RAM, you get Wired, Active, Inactive and Free together with the top-consuming apps if it’s the battery you can see cycles, health and a progress bar. iStat Menus works like this: you either get an icon or a graph in the menubar, and to see further information about that item you have to click to display another gorgeous black menu with many additional details (numbers, graphs) about that item. You can also set rounded corners and tell the app to display a “Edit in preferences” menu in each dropdown item. The first tab, General, lets you choose between black icons and graphs in the menubar or aqua ones, and I’ve chosen the black ones because I can’t stand colored stuff running up there. ![]() ![]() It’s even replaced some “native” items from Apple. Guess what, this update turned out to be one of the best Mac apps I’ve tried recently, and after some customization (because you know, I’m kind of a menubar geek) the app it’s now up and running there. I never really considered switching from the simple widget to another app in the menubar, but the new version 3 came out last night and I decided to give it a try. Also, it’s free.ĭespite iStat Pro being awesome and unobtrusive, Bjango also developed a different version of it, iStat Menus, which unlike the widget is a “real app” that sits in the menubar and allows you to choose which stats to display as icons or small graphs, animated just like in the widget. It may be a little scary and too complex at first, but once you get the hang of it, it becomes a must have tool to understand everything about your Mac in different situations. As Bjango’s tradition is a great looking piece of software but, most of all, it’s useful: when I’m doing something that requires a high consumption of resources like exporting a HD video or downloading many files at the same time, I usually invoke the Dashboard and take a look at what’s going on using this widget. All the providers are premium weather services with. Please note that WillyWeather is a service that provides BoM data for Australia. We set a sensible default, based on your location. You can choose the provider you’d like from within iStat Menus. IStat Pro is a very popular dashboard widget for Mac OS X that lets you quickly check on your Mac stats like fan temperature, battery health, RAM and CPU usage. iStat Menus uses The Weather Channel, Dark Sky, AccuWeather, and WillyWeather for weather data. It lives in your menu bar at the top of your screen, giving real-time system stats. I’ve always done that with the iStat Pro dashboard widget from Bjango (former iSlayer), but last night I decided to upgrade to iStat Menus 3. iStat Menus is a powerful, customizable system monitoring app for macOS. But, I think that’s a given that I should keep an eye on its internal stats: you know, stuff like the battery health, CPU usage over time and memory consumption. I think that my machine is still a great one though, with its 4GB of RAM and a pretty capable hard disk: it’s been able to do so many things for me in these two years that I don’t see it being replaced anytime soon, actually. Maybe with some SSD and new processor goodness. A realtime listing of the sensors in your Mac, including temperatures, hard drive temperatures (where supported), fans, CPU frequency, GPU frequency (Intel GPUs. Improved and new localisations ( 36 languages in total).I have a late 2008 Macbook Pro, and one could argue that maybe it’s time for me to consider an upgrade to a new model. Reorderable dropdown menus, with the ability to hide sections. Additional options, like dual line menu bar clocks, and condensed text for showing more in less space. Hotkeys to open and close menu dropdowns, for quick keyboard access. More colors and theme options, including light and dark vibrant menu dropdown backgrounds. Notifications, based on CPU, network, disk, battery, weather and other events. Refined menu bar items, dropdowns and other aspects match the new design of macOS 11 Big Sur. Weather with current temperature, hourly forecast, weekly overview and so much more. ![]()
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