
Tell is a new Mac app that reimagines desktop widgets, making them genuinely fun and visually delightful. The app has sparked enthusiastic community discussion and addresses a gap left by Apple's native widget system in macOS Sonoma. Here's why it matters and what to watch for next.
There’s a new player in the macOS utility space, and it’s turning heads. Tell, a recently launched Mac application, is reimagining how users interact with desktop widgets — transforming them from forgettable screen clutter into something genuinely engaging and fun. The app has already sparked lively discussion across developer communities and tech forums, signaling that it may have struck a nerve with users who’ve long felt that Apple’s native widget experience falls short.
At its core, Tell is a widget-focused app designed exclusively for macOS. Rather than simply replicating what Apple already offers through its built-in widget system, Tell takes a different approach — one that prioritizes personality, visual delight, and practical utility in equal measure.
The app lets users create, customize, and display widgets on their Mac desktops with a level of polish and playfulness that Apple’s default options haven’t quite delivered. Think of it as the missing link between macOS’s somewhat sterile widget panel and the kind of rich, interactive desktop experience that power users have been craving since widgets made their return to the Mac in macOS Sonoma.
Apple reintroduced desktop widgets with macOS Sonoma in late 2023, allowing users to place widgets directly on the desktop for the first time in years. It was a welcome move, but the execution left many users underwhelmed. Native widgets often felt static, limited in scope, and visually monotonous.
That gap in the market is precisely where Tell positions itself. The app doesn’t just add more widgets — it rethinks what widgets on a Mac should feel like. And the timing couldn’t be better. With macOS continuing to evolve and Apple pushing deeper into personalization features, third-party tools like Tell are filling the gaps that first-party software leaves behind.
If you’ve been following the evolution of desktop customization tools, you might also want to check out our coverage of Canva AI 2.0: The Creative Platform’s Boldest Update Yet for more utilities that enhance the macOS experience.
The online discussion around Tell has been notably enthusiastic. Threads on forums like Hacker News and indie Mac software communities have highlighted several aspects that users appreciate:
This kind of organic, community-driven discussion is often the strongest signal that an indie app has genuine staying power. When users voluntarily share a link to an app and advocate for it in public forums, it tells you something about the product’s quality.
Tell’s emergence is part of a broader renaissance in widget culture across platforms. On iOS, widgets have become a cornerstone of home screen customization since iOS 14. Android has offered rich widget support for over a decade. And on the desktop, both Windows 11 and macOS have been racing to make widgets a core part of the user experience again.
Yet despite all this platform-level investment, third-party developers have consistently been the ones to push the envelope. Apps like Rainmeter on Windows proved years ago that users hunger for creative desktop customization. Tell appears to be carrying that torch on the Mac side, which has historically been underserved in this category.
For those interested in how AI is also transforming desktop utilities and personal productivity tools, our deep dive into Lovable Desktop App: Tabs, Projects & Local MCP Workflows covers several emerging apps worth watching.
The Mac utility space isn’t empty. Apps like Widgetsmith (primarily iOS) and various menu bar tools have attempted to enhance the widget experience. But Tell differentiates itself in a few key ways:
The immediate future for Tell looks promising but uncertain in the way all indie apps are. The key questions will be whether the development team can sustain momentum, expand the widget library, and potentially introduce features that keep users engaged over the long term.
There’s also the ever-present wildcard of Apple itself. If Apple significantly improves its native widget system in a future macOS release, Tell will need to stay several steps ahead to remain relevant. History has shown that Apple isn’t shy about absorbing third-party innovations into its own software — a dynamic that every indie Mac developer understands intimately.
That said, the early signs are encouraging. The app has clearly resonated with a passionate subset of Mac users, and the quality of the discussion surrounding it suggests that Tell has the foundation to grow into something meaningful.
Tell represents exactly the kind of thoughtful, design-forward software that makes the Mac ecosystem special. In a world where widgets have become ubiquitous but often uninspired, this app dares to make them genuinely fun. Whether you’re a minimalist who wants a clean, elegant dashboard or a power user looking to pack your desktop with useful at-a-glance information, Tell is worth keeping on your radar.
The app is a reminder that sometimes the best software doesn’t reinvent the wheel — it just makes it spin more beautifully.