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Will Gleft a comment
Hey everyone - I’m the maker of Tell. I’ve always been into 3D design and interactive visuals, and for the longest time I wished my desktop felt a bit more… alive. Everything felt flat, static, and honestly a bit boring. I wanted something that looked and felt cool, but was also actually useful day-to-day. So I built Tell - a way to turn system data like CPU, network, and battery into...

TellMac widgets, made fun.
Native macOS app that transforms system stats into interactive 3D objects. Monitor network speed, CPU usage, battery, and more through smooth, animated visuals that live on your desktop. Designed to feel fast, minimal, and alive - not like traditional widgets. More collections, animated objects, and new system modules for deeper insights are already in development and coming soon

TellMac widgets, made fun.
Will Gleft a comment
Quick update for everyone who checked this out earlier: Knock now works on all Macs - including those without the built-in accelerometer. You can now use your iPhone as an input device, which makes it way more reliable and accessible across different setups. I also pushed a bunch of improvements: cleaner UI easier testing before purchasing smoother launch behaviour live update banners so...

KnockKnock on your MacBook to control your Mac
Will Gleft a comment
Hey everyone! I’m Will, the creator of Knock. The idea started pretty simply. I noticed Apple Silicon MacBooks have a built-in accelerometer, but nothing really uses it. I started experimenting with it and realized you could actually detect taps or knocks on the laptop. That turned into a simple idea: what if you could control your Mac just by knocking on it? Knock lets you trigger actions like...

KnockKnock on your MacBook to control your Mac
Knock turns taps on your MacBook into instant actions. Switch tabs, change desktops, play/pause music, open apps, run custom scripts, or take screenshots - all with a simple knock. Tap the desk beside your laptop or knock on the MacBook’s chassis (not the trackpad). Knock uses the built-in accelerometer in Apple Silicon MacBooks to trigger customizable shortcuts.

KnockKnock on your MacBook to control your Mac

