![]() ![]() And probably many other people who have usage scenarios we haven’t even thought of yet. Users of Macs with smaller screens (11″ MacBook Air, anyone?) who occasionally wished they could see more data on their screen. Users with multiple displays who change resolutions on one or more of the connected displays. Who might find Resolutionator useful? Owners of Retina Macs who find themselves switching between “OMG it’s stunning!” retina mode and “I need to see more data” more space modes. Set resolutions for any attached displays via either the menu bar or floating resolution switcher.It sounds like magic, but it’s real, and it works. For instance, you can set a 13″ Retina MacBook Pro to display at 2880×1800 pixels, greater than its 2560×1600 true resolution. On some Macs, use resolutions greater than the available pixels.Switch resolutions via an onscreen menu, accessed via a user-defined hot key.Use more resolutions than those available in the Displays System Preferences panel.That’s right Resolutionator brings back the menu bar resolution switching feature that Apple saw fit to remove at some point in the past.īut as with all our apps, Resolutionator is capable of many additional tricks. No, not those resolutions, but resolutions like those seen at right. ![]() And what is Resolutionator? As noted in our teaser last week, it’s a tool to help you with your resolutions in the new year. ![]() The “something new” portion of today’s promised “ something different, something new” is a public beta of Resolutionator. ![]()
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