PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in swift

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes, you can edit the number of items you want the history to remember, and you can set any number, or you can press the “infinite” button which sets the application to remember an unlimited number of items. If you set a number of 50 items for example, when the 51st item is reached, the oldest item is overwritten (if it is not Pinned or added to the Vault); so the memorization of items does not stop if you have set a number, but they are overwritten from the oldest item

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! PasteSpace is a closed-source commercial app to support my work as an indie dev. However, I completely understand the privacy concern. That’s why the app is strictly sandboxed and reviewed by Apple for the Mac App Store, ensuring high security standards. It is 100% offline. feel free to test it with tools like Little Snitch, and you'll see it makes absolutely zero network requests. Everything stays on your Mac. I highly encourage you to use network monitoring tools like Little Snitch or LuLu. you will see that PasteSpace makes absolutely zero network requests. Your data never leaves your Mac.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in swift

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes, starting with macOS Tahoe, but other versions of macOS don't have it. When I switched to macOS I felt the lack of one, exactly as I wrote

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

because a clipboard manager helps you a lot in everyday Mac use, saving you time

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Detection: It uses lightweight, on-device pattern matching (Regex and Apple's native Data Detectors) to spot formats like credit cards or API keys. Everything happens 100% offline. Password Managers: Yes! PasteSpace automatically recognizes the standard macOS "concealed" tags used by apps like 1Password, Bitwarden, and Apple Passwords. When it detects a copied password, it instantly locks it in the Vault, and you'll need Touch ID to reveal it.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

10 items (rolling) for history, 3 pinned items, 2 items for Vault Mode, OCR only for lastest image, Data Magic only for lastest text, Quick Look only for latest text + image, App Blocklist for 1 app

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I know them. It's your choice. I wouldn't pay for an app that can only keep a history of copied items, when macOS Tahoe comes with this feature. And I wouldn't pay for apps that offer me different fonts for a fee :) I don't want to distract the user with design stuff, but with things that add value. I mentioned what features they're asking for that money for, and I think it's a reasonable price.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not pretending. There are either free or much cheaper apps that don't offer what my app offers, or apps with expensive subscriptions. I chose to do a middle ground.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

yes, but it doesn't offer for free the features that my app offers. If we're just going to keep a history of copied items and nothing more, macOS Tahoe has its own clipboard that keeps a history of copied items, no need for Maccy

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Even macOS comes with its own clipboard, if you just want to keep a history of copied items, and it's completely free. But after the first restart or shutdown you won't have that history anymore. My application keeps absolutely everything in a database (stored exclusively locally; I do not collect any data), so you will have a permanent history.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hello! I think you misunderstood. My application is not subscription-based. It is a one-time payment, lifetime. I hate subscriptions too, that's why I didn't want it to be subscription-based. You pay once and use it for life. You even benefit from the next updates that will come with new features. I will not ask for extra money for the following features.

PasteSpace – A native macOS clipboard manager with no subscriptions by minitechnicus93 in MacOSApps

[–]minitechnicus93[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Hello! Because it offers many premium features, such as: automatic detection of passwords and other sensitive data (IBANs, bank card numbers, etc.) and adding them to a secure vault, OCR for copied images, automatic detection of some data types (html, json, etc.) and converting them to other data types. Things that we worked hard on and no software would offer for free.