 If you want to level up your window management skills on your Mac, if that even is such a thing, or you want to be able to set up predefined layouts that can open up for your different modes of work at the touch of a button, and I've got just the app for you today. Hello and welcome to Take One Tech, my name's Alec and today we're focusing on window management. I know, isn't that just such a riveting subject? Well, believe it or not to me, it's actually quite interesting. And I hope you find it a little bit interesting. And even if you don't, I hope you do enjoy the end result because that's ultimately what this is all about is getting more productive on your Mac and giving you the tools and techniques to do that with. So today we're talking about a little app called Moom M-Double-O-M. Now I should just point out that all of this week I've been doing reviews of apps that come as part of the Set App Bundle, which is a monthly subscription where you get access to over 200 apps. However, I need to make it quite clear, Moom is not one of those. So if you've watched my other four, five, six videos that I've done all about Set App this week, don't be confused into thinking that this is one of the apps included because it isn't. However, it is only $10 and it will save you a hell of a lot more than $10 worth of time over the time that you use it. So let me come straight over to tell you where you can get it first and then I'll give you a little bit of an insight into what it does. So it's from a company called Many Tricks who indeed do have many tricks. They've got quite a few different apps that are all these kind of small utility style apps and I've used quite a few of them and so I'll come round to doing a review on the others at some point. But as I say, it is just $10 and you can get it from manytricks.com slash Moom. You can either buy it in the App Store as well, the Apple App Store for Mac or you can buy it direct from the developer. So I tend to go for direct for the developer where that option is available. But probably it's easier if I just actually show you or I'm trying to describe it, maybe show you how I use it first of all. And then we can get into exactly how you go about setting it up and things like that. So what is it for? Well, it's a window management app and what does that mean? Well, it's a way to organize the windows that you've got on your screen and it works very smoothly and it also has keyboard shortcuts that are assignable to it so that you can create sort of predefined workspaces. And what do I mean by that? Well, let me just share my entire screen with you. Now I've got my MacBook screen and then I've also got my monitor. My monitor is a Philips 43 inch 4K monitor. So it's not a widescreen. I've never been a fan of the widescreen. I don't like looking too far left and right. So this is more like basically four HD monitors in a two by two arrangement but obviously just one big screen. So it works quite well for me and I quite like that way of working. So anyway, here is what my screen looks like when it's in its full resolution. So that might look a little bit small for you. Often when I do these videos and I do screen demos where I'm sharing my screen, I'll actually change the resolution. And in fact, I talked about that in one of my other videos where I have a little toggle up in the menu bar. I'll leave a link to the video that I did about that up in the top corner but I have a little menu bar toggle that I can change the resolution from 4K to HD basically. So, but now I've left it in my HD, my 4K resolution just to show you what I mean. So here we are. This is the way that I normally record these videos although actually sometimes they are scaled down. But I have my window in the front just to make sure that I can glance down at it and see that I actually have got the right picture up and then the right scene up rather. And then I have my panels over on the left-hand side just in case I need them. Although I operate most of them from my stream deck as most of you probably know by now. I've got my audio settings down at the bottom and my camera and things like that over on the right-hand side. And then depending on what I'm doing in the video, I might have a finder window open or something like that or if I'm doing a demonstration of a particular piece of software, then sometimes I'll just keep it on this screen to then drag it over to my secondary monitor. So my secondary monitor is the one when I do my screen sharing. So that one is just over there in real life. It's over there and it's over there for you too. If that made sense. Anyway, I digress. So, but I also use Ecamm Live when I am on a Zoom call because I use Ecamm Live as a virtual cam into my Zoom. But I obviously don't want my main Ecamm Live window here. And I also want different windows open because I don't want to be looking over to the side. I want to be able to have my Zoom calls and meetings and be able to see certain other stuff on my screen. Well, it doesn't matter because with the help of Moom and a little program shortcut that I've given it, I can press a button like this. And this is now just reorganizing my screen for me. So now I've got my Zoom window, front and center in front of me. I've got my Ecamm Live. It's rearranged all of the panels as well. Not just the main window, but I do like to have that up there just so that that's my output. It's kind of out of my field of view. Off to the, the monitor is quite big. So it's still off to the side. But then I've got my notes panel on the other side. So if I'm in a meeting, then I'll have certain notes for either for the flow of the meeting or the agenda or something like that. I'll put those all there in that little note. Then down at the bottom, I have my Safari browser because I like to have a browser on the screen when we're on a meeting because sometimes there's something we need to look up. So that means I can just quickly go and look something up. Then I have my Finder window. Again, if I need some files or something like that during the meeting, then I've got them to hand in the Finder. And then I always just have my audio hijack opening that bottom corner so that I can check that the little meters are bouncing and things like that. And if I want to share system audio, although I do do that through Ecamm Live anyway, but occasionally sometimes if there's any issue and I have to just go naked as it were with a single camera, not using Ecamm Live, then this would also allow me to share the system audio. So this is basically what my setup is like when I'm on a meeting. So that was a bit of a pointless information for you there, really, wasn't it? The point to show you was though that this is all organized for me and it's all done by moon. So I can just shut this down if I don't need this anymore. And I'll show you exactly how to do it. In fact, what I could do is I could put these things all back as they were by pressing my Ecamm Live shortcut and there you go. It's moved my browser window off here and over to the other window and I've now got my pallets all where they want them. So if you are an Ecamm Live user and you often find yourself sort of shuttling pallets around into different locations, depending on what you're doing, then this is a great solution for that. So let me show you about exactly how it works. And actually there are a lot more features to it than just this as well. So I'll show you those as well. So if I come out of my screen sharing mode and then my demo mode and go into screen sharing rather, now I've got a window. And I should say when you do load moon or download and install moon rather, it will do that little thing which I often talk about in these apps where it asks you to go into your system preferences and into your security and privacy tab and maybe update, give it access rather for moon to have access to screen sharing and keyboard access and things like that. But it will prompt you to do all of these things as part of the installation. So just to let you know that that is to be perfectly expected because it is something that's working in the background and is integrated into your system. So you need to just give it that access. But once it is loaded, you basically really access it from up in the top corner and in the little expansion button. So if you're familiar with the Mac, which I'm guessing you are because this is what this video is about. But these three little sort of traffic light colored buttons. You've got the close window, the minimize window and this one, which is usually the maximize window. Well, as you can see, when I hover over that now I have got some slightly different controls come up. In fact, I've got a whole new window of controls. And this is essentially what moon is. This is where moon lives. Now there are a few simple things that you can do. I'm just getting ahead of myself there. You can see that there's these little five icons. And so if I click on one of those I can either make the window full screen. I can have it go to the right-hand side. I can have it go to the left-hand side or to the top. So that's just a quick and simple way to snap it to the top. But also I can also just click and hold on the window. And if I drag it up to the top then you can see it highlighted the top corner at the top half of the screen. Or if I drag it into another corner it has dragged it into that top corner of the screen. And as soon as I pull it away it sort of releases it and goes back to its original size. So that you can just do with drag and like dragging it around. So if you've got a screen and you wanted to have four windows and have them nicely tiled then that would be a great way to do that with just a quick drag of the mouse. But you may have noticed that I got a little bit ahead of myself on this extra panel dropped up. Well, here what I've also got is you can also program your own location. So as well as just all on the right or all on the left you can actually have any number of different configurations of that. And the screen is split up into, think of it like individual tiles. And so you can make up your own sort of sections of the screen where you might want a window to be. So there's like one over here where I want it at the top left but not right down to the bottom. So I can click on that one or I could have it to one of these other ones like this. Maybe I want it in the middle at the bottom. And when you've got a 4K screen, a big amount of real estate, that's a terrible word. I hate using that word for the screen. I can't believe I've just said that actually. But there you go. When you've got a big amount of screen space this is a really good way to actually be able to just easily snap your applications into different locations. So you can imagine obviously if I've got lots of different apps open then I could just quickly drop them into place. But the other thing you can do is you might have noticed this little sort of dotted line box down here. And if I hover over it, it goes green. Sorry, I just moved my mouse a bit too quickly there. It goes green. And if I click on that now what that gives me is the screen goes slightly dark and you can see that there is a little sort of square highlighted. And in fact, you can see now how this grid is made up. And I'll show you later how you can do this but you split the screen into as many divisions as you want. So I've got it in a nine by nine grid. And then once you click in that little box I can just highlight a particular sized grid area like that. And that's where the window goes. So this is another great way if you want to do sort of slightly different sizes for your windows you just click in the box and you can highlight the area wherever you want the window to go. So if I had another window open so let me just open a new window. And let's say I went into here and go to the Mac rumor site. I do visit that one quite a lot. So let me say that I wanted to have this one and just have it over at this side. So you can see how it's easy to get these windows all aligned. In fact, that's actually the too small for the minimum width of that window. So that was a bit of a bad example really because I'm doing it on my reduced resolution monitor here for this demo. So sorry about that. That's perhaps a better example. It works on the 4K monitor. I can assure you. So that is how you can easily make these things to different sizes and resize them so they all fit quite neatly. So let me just show you another couple of things about it. So when I'm on here, what I've also got is in this dropdown, I've also got these different layouts. And that's basically where I did that one that I showed you. So that Zoom meeting is a predefined layout and it's got a layout for notes, e-cam live, Zoom, Safari and some other apps. And then I've got another one for my sort of YouTube management of this channel. So when I'm actually doing this sort of behind the scenes stuff, I have a different layout. I've got one for when I'm doing my website management. I've got one for my trading stuff for my marketing company. I've got one for productivity, which is has Omnifocus and Mail and things like that for my task management. And then a couple of other ones, data analysis and architecture and stuff like that for the architectural company. So I have different layouts for these different mindframes. And to set a layout, it's actually really simple. Once you've got everything in the organization that you want it, you just come onto here. And instead of this little dropdown, if you right click on it, you just click, click save window layout snapshot. And that saves whatever the positions things are in as a new snapshot. So let me just do that now and I'll click on that. And that will bring up the preferences window. If you want to go and edit this afterwards, you can just come in here and right click on that as well. And then you'll see that there are, the other option there in that menu is preferences. So if you click in that, it will just bring you straight into this menu. So now we are in the Moom preferences. Incidentally, if you do actually just open the Moom app or search for the Moom app, then it will also open up into this window. So this is basically the Moom interface if you like. So let me come and start from the beginning and we'll go through the different sections that there are and it'll give you a bit of an insight into what more it can do. So let me just start by coming into the general chat. And what we've got here is a few options. So treat draws as part of their parent window. So if you've got an app with something that slides out, then you can have that to be treated as part of the main window in terms of where it's sizing it. Separate windows by, and then you can click this and have a spacing. So I like to have all of my windows all joined together with no gaps between them. But if you wanted to have a gap between all of your windows, then this is where you would do that. Then you can have grid keyboard control highlight off. So this is where it's actually highlighting the grid. And also one thing I forgot to mention is there is also, in fact, let me just quickly come out of here because I should just mention this before we go on. So where I showed you here, you can come down and select one of these different options if you want to arrange it in a different way. Obviously we don't want to be moving our hand and mouse all the way up here just to resize the window. So I should point out there is actually a keyboard shortcut for to bring up all the options. And that's user definable. But if I press that keyboard shortcut now, it brings up this window. And I can then basically, I can either press the arrow keys up and down to actually move it down one block. I can also zoom it to full screen using space. You can see these commands here. But also all of these user defined spaces that I created, it goes off after a time. I can give them a keystroke. So I can just press the keystroke and it will actually move it into that position. So that was keystroke E has moved it to there or keystroke T moves it to there. So that means that all of these things can be just triggered by a keystroke as well. Because obviously we don't like moving the mouse. The whole point of this is to make things better. Not having to just go up and move the mouse around and things like that to click on that little button at the top. But we do access the preferences like that. So I'll just get back to that. But it's important to know that that screen pops up because that does come in as part of the preferences. So sorry for missing that out at the very beginning. But there you go. So now we have got a couple of other options. So launch automatically at login. This is one of the few that I do actually have or running in the background and it does launch every time at login. I often have some of the system processes that I don't always open at login. But there you go. Show preferences on launch. So this will show this window. Well, I don't have that because I know what the preferences are. I don't need to do it. And then run as a menu bar icon application rather. So when you have that set, it will have a little icon in the menu bar. But you can also have it run standard as in in the dock or you can have it faceless which is it is neither in the menu bar or in the dock. It's just running in the background of your system. So I like to have the little menu bar icon up there as well, although I do have it tucked away in a bartender. And by the way, this is the icon. It's this sort of M sort of on its side. That is the Moom icon. So now we will come to the mouse. And this is where you can have the snap to edges. So this is the thing that I showed you earlier where it can snap to the edges. That is optional. So you can toggle this on and off. And also you can select what you want to happen when you go to the top of the screen, the bottom, the left or the right or the corners of the screen as well. And you can say what you want to happen when it goes to there. Then also there is a delay. So that is the delay between you actually, for example, coming on here and clicking something or dragging it to the edge. So there's a 0.2 second delay just before it actually does the thing. So you don't want it just accidentally moving to the edge. And then it suddenly snaps there without you being quite ready for it or wanting it to. Ignore edges and corners that border other displays. So I've obviously got these two monitors side by side. So you could have it so that this side here it would ignore it. But I don't want it to ignore it because I do want it to be able to snap to this side even though my monitor is there. But that is what that means. So you can ignore that if you did want to, never want to snap to that side. But as I say, I'll leave that off. Revert when dragging from a previous snap position. So that is the thing that I was talking about where if you're in the top corner like this and it snapped it into that position, when I drag it away, it actually snaps back to the size that it was previously. If I switch that off, what would happen is it would snap to that size. And then when I moved it, it would just maintain that size. Well, I like it to go back to its original size once I drag it out from the position I've put it in. So that is what that option is. Let me just come back to that. So that is what that does. The zoom controls are basically for the little button at the top because that green button there out of this red, yellow and green, I called it the Maximize button, but it's actually called the Zoom button. So that is what that button is there. And so this section of the system preferences is all about what happens when you hover over that button. So if I come back over here for a minute, so when do you want it to pop up the controls? So if I hover over that, you see how there's that little pop up? Well, that is what that means there, that little symbol that I've ticked that. So I do want the controls to pop up when I hover over the zoom. Then what do you want it to show by default? So at the moment, I have it showing the Moom controls, but you can change that as well to be the standard Mac OS Zoom button menu instead. But I do want to show those Moom controls. Then there's the delay of how long it takes before coming up. So that is point one of a second when you hover over the little green button. And then this is where you pick that grid. So if you remember where I told you about how when you highlight it, I've got this set as a nine by nine grid, so nine wide and nine deep. Well, this is set in the controls here. So that is actually the maximum that you can go, but you can have anything up to nine. So you could have it like a three by four or four by five or whatever series of cells that you wanted it split up into. And that is where you would do that. Then enable access to custom controls. So that is, let me think, that's got me thinking now, show on hover. Ah, the custom control. So that means this one, that had me stump for a moment there. Sorry about that. Enable access to custom controls. So that will be the custom controls that I've set, which is all of these ones. So you can have it enabling access to those or not from within that menu. And then bring Moomed Windows to the front automatically. So that's when you're having those defaults set or where you set a window size, something like that, it will automatically bring it to the front. Then the next one is the keyboard. So these are keyboard shortcuts. So you remember I said that there was that shortcut and in my case it is control command options down arrow and it brings up that. So this is where you set that little keyboard shortcut. So trigger keyboard control with hotkey. So you can just set anything that you want there. You can show the logo. I don't need to see the logo for Moom. I know what it is. It just puts a big Moom logo on the screen. So I don't really need to see that. Show cheat sheet. Well, that is exactly what I want because I do want to be reminded of those little cheat sheet, little keyboard shortcuts rather to help me. And then repeat to toggle grid. So if I do that and then do it again, he says, not quite sure. Exactly what that is doing. I don't have it on and I'm not entirely sure what it does. Repeat to toggle grid. I'm stumped with that one. If anybody finds out what that is, please do leave it in the comments because I'm not sure but it's not something that I use. So yeah, I'll have to get back to you on that one. That is really a stump me. So sorry about that. I'll move swiftly on and please just don't tell anyone about that. He'll ruin my reputation. My reputation will be in shreds or more so than he's already is. But anyway, so once you've got this on as well, you can also use arrow keys to move things around. So that's what I showed you earlier and that is an option that you have in here. So arrow keys to move the display. You can also move things to another display. So if I was to do this and then press my option key and an arrow, it's actually just moved it onto my other display. You didn't see that, but it just whizzed across to the other display there. So that's another option that you've got. You can also do things like have it grow or shrink or move to another half of the screen and so on, but I don't use those because I've got plenty of options with what I've already got in there. Then return is return to original dimensions. So that again is these are all from this little keyboard shortcut. And in fact, it tells you in here, revert to original dimensions is revert. And then this tells you what all of these different things are. But this is basically where you set all of these up. I should say that most of these are the default settings, by the way. I haven't gone in and done any major trickery with any of this. This is all pretty much as it was. So auto dismiss keyboard control after only other actions because basically if I press this, if I was to have this move and zoom ticked, then basically if I press the little arrow, then it would only allow me to move it one time and then the menu would disappear. So we definitely don't want that one ticked, I don't think. And the same with the move and grow and shrink. The only time we want this menu to disappear off the window apart from when it times out as it just has done is if we are actually setting a specific position, like pressing one of these buttons to actually move it because then obviously we've selected our position and that's when we want it to disappear. So I would recommend that you just leave that as it is. And next we come on to really the interesting part, which is if you remember where we set that little profile for ourself, that little saved that layout by coming up into the top corner and pressing this to right click on here and save window layout as a snapshot. Well, that window snapshot has now come down here and it tells us all the different things that were open and it's remembered all of the positions of them as they were when we saved it. And here is where we can put a hotkey in for it. So I could put in, let me say that. So I've now given it that hotkey and whenever I press that hotkey or combination of keys, everything will go back to the way it was when we just saved it. Now, you can also have these automatically trigger. I personally don't do this because I always find when I have things that do automatically happen based on certain displays and things like that, I always get caught out with them and they never quite work exactly as I intended them to. And that's probably down to user error more than anything. So I like to be a little bit more in control of it. I do do a lot of automation but I tend to still have it with this sort of thing, have it where I'm actually taking the action. So, but if I did want to, I could have it so that when I switched to a particular display. So I've got two displays, however, there's multiple spaces. You could have it when you go to a particular space, it automatically lays out the windows as you want them. But as I say, I personally don't have that switched on. As a default, the title will just have a list of all the apps that you've put in there but you could actually just give it a name. So I'll just put demo. And then I ignore obstructed windows. So that is if there are windows in the way, just ignore those and it just puts all of these over the top. And if you ever do move things around, then you can always update the snapshot. So here you can see you can collapse that as well. Now, one thing which I think would probably be quite good is if they actually had the title would appear up here because otherwise when you collapse them, you can't actually see what all of these other ones are if indeed you did need to go in and edit them. But this is basically where I have, here you can see my little Zoom one, my Zoom and Ecam meeting. You'll also notice that it has actually saved a little tiny snapshot of all the windows open. So that is looks a little bit like that Zoom profile or Zoom layout that I showed you earlier. I just to give you a couple of examples of some other layouts because just in case you are interested, I will show you. This is an example of one that I have. So some of my work I do a lot of work with spreadsheets and also I work on a remote server in the UK. I'm in Thailand, but I just have a VPN into a remote server. So all of our data for our stock trading stuff is on a server in the UK. So I've actually got a VPN into a virtual windows machine sitting on that server. So unfortunately, although I'm a Mac user, I spend a lot of my time in this little windows window in the middle of my screen, but then also analyzing data in the Excel on my machine as well. So this is sort of a 4K machine, a 4K layout rather, and then it's got a basically a HD screen in front and center, and then some Excel data and stuff like that on the same screen. So that is one example. Another one would be when I do my website management for my website for this channel, then I'll often have my sort of YouTube channel open here for copying links to videos and things like that and I find a window and then edit my website. So that's just a couple of ways that I have things laid out. And as I say, these are all programmed into here and each one of them has a keyboard shortcut. But the other thing that you can do in here as well is you can set these different layouts. So those ones that come up when you hover over on the little icon here, all of these different ones here, those ones are all created in here. And so the way you do that is you simply, first of all, at the bottom, you'll see you can define the size of the sort of grid pattern. So I've gone for the maximum again, nine by nine, which works well with a large display. And then what all you do is you just click on a plus and what it's asking is you, first of all, you select what you want. So this is move and zoom. So this is to go to a particular shape on this screen and all you do is you just take your little highlighter. You can see that there's one little square being highlighted and then I can click and drag and you just highlight the space where you want the window to be. So now that has created a new option for me to sort of snap a window to that space and I can give this one a little shortcut here. I'm not sure what I've used so far, I'll just give that one eye. And now when I press my little down arrow, you can see that that's popped up at the bottom of the list there. So if I was to press I, it would move the window into that position. You can also, from here, so that is the move and zoom or you could have a set a hotkey for these, you know, move to the edge or the corner or so on. But then this is also the arrange windows. So you'll notice that these ones where we've arranged a series of windows are one of those ones. You can also add a menu header and a menu separator. And all that is, is when you have the little dropdown, you can see that there is this line up here just above this one and that is a separator. There's another line just below this one and that is a separator. And then you've got a header here. So if you want to split up your views and name them all or group them all, then that is where you would do that. So if I was to just give you an example of that and I was to change this to a menu header and then I was to call this one a test. Got so many things called test some in different places on my computer. But now when I come to here, oops, I didn't want to maximize the screen. Thank you, pardon. Just come and toggle this one off while I'm at it. Get rid of those desktop icons. So in here, now you'll see we've got that little title there at the very bottom. In fact, it's just gone off the screen. That's frustrating. Hang on a second. Let me fix this. No point giving you a demonstration if you can't actually see it. What I'll do is if I come back into my preferences, that little test that I had down there, I'm gonna drag that up somewhere near the top. So let's not put it right at the top, just somewhere near the top. There we go. And now if I come in here, you'll see we've got that little test header there. So that is all that is. So that is how simple it is to add in different layouts, things like that. If you want to delete them, you can just delete them like that. And that is as simple as it is. And as you can see, there isn't really much more to say about the preferences. But now perhaps you might like to see, let me think about an example, what we could do. In fact, it didn't really matter totally. I can just open up my stream deck though. Configure stream deck. And now what I'll do is I'll come into this one. And then I'll just delete this one here. And then I'm just going to make a folder. I don't normally use folders anymore in stream deck. I'll leave a video all about folders versus profiles. Spoiler alert, profiles is the way to go. But I'll leave a link to that video up in the top corner as I had a bit of a revelation about it. And totally ripped apart my stream deck setup and redid it all as profiles. But anyway, I'll use a folder this time to demonstrate. So let me say, let's say for example, that you start your day in the morning and you have to open up Excel, maybe PowerPoint or something like that. Maybe a web browser or something, or maybe a particular find it folder. Well, you could have this all do it all at once and then load up your moon thing. And the way you do that is simply with a multi-action. By the way, I do also do some of this sort of stuff with keyboard maestro. And in fact, all of my window management, I used to do with keyboard maestro, but I've just found that moon is a lot easier and a lot simpler to just get it set up. So I'll do a whole another video about keyboard maestro and how I use that. But so you can do some of this with that. And one thing that you can't do, so simply with the sort of built-in actions in Stream Deck is close-down applications. So you can set a multi-action, which is what I'm gonna show you now, to open up all the apps you want and then you moon can put them all in the right place. But what about when you finish work and you wanna press that button and everything closes down? Well, that is where you need a little application called keyboard maestro. But I'll show you that on another day. And incidentally, keyboard maestro integrates with Stream Deck as well. So you can still do it with a touch of a Stream Deck button. But what I'm gonna show you here is the system actions. So we want to have an open command. So let's say you've got three apps that you want to open. So we just go into here. Let's say one of them was, I forget what I said. Let's say Excel, it doesn't really matter. Excel. So we search for that application like this and it has not come up as a first option. In fact, it's finding all of my Excel files. Okay, no problem. It will come up. It's just not coming up right at the moment. There you go, Microsoft PowerPoint. In fact, I think it did come up, but I just didn't see it. So let's say we're opening PowerPoint then and Word and some other applications. You basically just add these open actions in for all of the different apps. All of the different apps. And then you would come to the hotkey and let's say the hotkey that we had for Moom to arrange all of these icons was command alt P for PowerPoint. Then now when I touch that button, it's gonna open all of the apps and it's gonna trigger that Moom action to go to that thing. And in fact, that's what I do with my Zoom setup. So it opens all of the apps and then presses the Zoom organization key for me and everything goes to exactly where it should be. So that is a little quick look at Moom. And hopefully that explains pretty much all of the things it does. And I'm hoping that you can see why it is such a useful app. And for $10, I don't know about you. I don't know how often you open and close apps, but it's certainly paid for itself more than enough for me to justify the expense of it. So yeah, it's manytricks.com slash Moom. I'll leave a link down below if you found this video useful as ever. Do me a favor and go and hit that like button and also subscribe if you aren't already because I'll be releasing a lot more videos about the sort of productivity apps that I use on the Mac because of late, my first 50 or 60 videos, whatever number we're up to now, have all been really quite heavily focused on Ecam Live and Stream Deck. And so there will be a lot of more Stream Deck coming and there'll be more Ecam Live coming because it is one of my favorite apps at the moment. And in case you're not familiar with it, you can go and get a free trial over at takeonetech.io slash ecam. And they've got a special offer for the month of July, which is at 30% off. So it's definitely a good time to go and get it, July 2021, in case you're watching this in a year's time. And it allows me to do all of this stuff that I'm doing on the fly in a sort of live production environment. And it's one of these apps that, I don't know quite what they do. If it was a food or a drink, I would be sure that they were drugging me with it because there's something about it that's really quite intriguing and captivating. And yeah, it's really got some sort of secret sauce in there. So I'll have to find out exactly what they're doing, but it is one of those apps that you'll find does just sort of surprise and delight you in true Apple fashion. So highly recommend Ecam Live. So with that said, I will leave you for now, but don't go anywhere because there are more great apps coming up next and I shall leave a link to some of those on the right hand side. Until the next one, have a great day.