Posts tagged: MenuMeters

Tweetie - Clicking this icon will bring up Tweetie and show me my latest tweets, DMs, notifications, and more from Twitter. I don’t really like the new Twitter for Mac compared to the old one, so that is why I still use the older version.Adium - I love Adium and use it everyday. It is the best IM client on OS X by far. I have changed the menu bar icon to a 1up icon depicting a mushroom from the Super Mario games.gfxCardStatus - My Macbook Pro 15” has both Intel HD and AMD Radeon 6750m GPUs in it, and OS X only gives the user to have automatic switching between both GPUs or using the discrete Radeon only. gfxCardStatus lets me use the integrated Intel GPU only so I can save on battery life when I am unplugged.SMARTReporter - I always worry about my SSD and external hard drives’ health/S.M.A.R.T. status, so I keep this utility on at all times. I even have it so it sends me an email if it is starting to fail!MenuMeters - From left to right, I have two aqua lights that show Disk Activity, then since I have a quad core Macbook Pro, it shows me the usage from all four cores. Memory usage is next, showing me the used and free totals, and lastly, we end with network, which upon clicking on it, shows me detailed information about my current network, which is through gigabit ethernet.Airport - Currently off, as I use gigabit ethernet most of the time.Bluetooth - Currently off, but I do have it on whenever I need to transfer a file or I am paired with another device.Time Machine - I have recently reinstalled and haven’t plugged in my external Firewire drive as of yet. Otherwise, this icon is really handy to see how much OS X has backed up and its progress.Sound - Usually I have an optical cable running from my laptop to my set of Logitech Z-5500 speakers and the icon would be greyed out, but I am currently away from my desk, so I am using the built-in speakers and the icon is usable.Battery - I have my laptop battery on the left side and my APC UPS battery on the right side. I love to show both, so that way I know which one is being charged at the moment.Time and Date - I have it set to 12H time and day only, because I am so used to clicking the icon and finding out the exact day.Spotlight - I use it constantly. I just couldn’t use OS X without it. (From Anchit Panchal)

Tweetie - Clicking this icon will bring up Tweetie and show me my latest tweets, DMs, notifications, and more from Twitter. I don’t really like the new Twitter for Mac compared to the old one, so that is why I still use the older version.
Adium - I love Adium and use it everyday. It is the best IM client on OS X by far. I have changed the menu bar icon to a 1up icon depicting a mushroom from the Super Mario games.
gfxCardStatus - My Macbook Pro 15” has both Intel HD and AMD Radeon 6750m GPUs in it, and OS X only gives the user to have automatic switching between both GPUs or using the discrete Radeon only. gfxCardStatus lets me use the integrated Intel GPU only so I can save on battery life when I am unplugged.
SMARTReporter - I always worry about my SSD and external hard drives’ health/S.M.A.R.T. status, so I keep this utility on at all times. I even have it so it sends me an email if it is starting to fail!
MenuMeters - From left to right, I have two aqua lights that show Disk Activity, then since I have a quad core Macbook Pro, it shows me the usage from all four cores. Memory usage is next, showing me the used and free totals, and lastly, we end with network, which upon clicking on it, shows me detailed information about my current network, which is through gigabit ethernet.
Airport - Currently off, as I use gigabit ethernet most of the time.
Bluetooth - Currently off, but I do have it on whenever I need to transfer a file or I am paired with another device.
Time Machine - I have recently reinstalled and haven’t plugged in my external Firewire drive as of yet. Otherwise, this icon is really handy to see how much OS X has backed up and its progress.
Sound - Usually I have an optical cable running from my laptop to my set of Logitech Z-5500 speakers and the icon would be greyed out, but I am currently away from my desk, so I am using the built-in speakers and the icon is usable.
Battery - I have my laptop battery on the left side and my APC UPS battery on the right side. I love to show both, so that way I know which one is being charged at the moment.
Time and Date - I have it set to 12H time and day only, because I am so used to clicking the icon and finding out the exact day.
Spotlight - I use it constantly. I just couldn’t use OS X without it.
(From Anchit Panchal)

(full size) Most of my menubar icons are used as indicators for monitoring certain aspects of my system. I rarely click on any of them as I do almost everything via the keyboard. From right to left:Spotlight: I really should get rid of that one as I never use it. Instead I’m using LaunchBar for searching.Clock: With weekday display.iStat Menus Calendar: To keep an eye on the date. Also helps me keep track of several world clocks.Input Method: I’m mostly using my Austrian (German) keyboard. Also gives me access to Kotoeri (Japanese) as well as keyboard viewer and character palette.Battery: Obviously I’m on a MacBook Pro, so having charge status visible is vital.Volume: To keep an eye on the audio output. I use the keyboard to actually change volume. Rarely used to check audio input and output (by holding ⌥ while clicking it).AirPort: Mostly used for monitoring my WiFi connection. Rarely used to actually connect to a network as my MBP usually knows the networks I connect to. Even more rarely used to gain technical details about the associated to access point.Displays: Put quite on the right hand side on purpose if a projector uses a very low resolution and my Mac decides to mirror displays. That way I can still easily get to it, just in case. Think of it as an emergency icon. (I could probably get rid of that one as I usually use LaunchBar to open the Displays PrefPanel anyway.)Time Machine: I never fully trust Time Machine. This helps me to check if it is working properly.iStat Menus CPU Bars: To keep an eye on my CPU’s load. Rarely used to spot a CPU hogging process. (I usually do that in a Terminal via Visor. (See below!))MenuMeters: A paging indicator (to know of excessive swapping action) and my memory usage pie chart. (iStat Menus doesn’t have a paging indicator). Too bad I cannot turn off the chart and have only the paging indicator there, or have iStat Menus give me a paging indicator instead.iStat Menus Memory: Memory usage graph to easily spot applications that suddenly grab a huge chunk of RAM.VPN: To connect to my customer’s networks all around and to protect my connections when using untrusted networks. (So pretty much any network except for my own.)Dial up: To connect one of those pesky USB UMTS/3G modems.iStat Menus disk monitors: To keep an eye on disk usage. The leftmost is my system partition and usually way too full for my SSD to be comfortable.iStat Menus disk throughput: To check for SSD/HD/USB stick speeds during lenghty copy operations or when recovering data from faulty media.MenuMeters network graph: Gives more comprehensive info of my interfaces and a cubic root scaled graph which I prefer over iStat Menu’s way to display this data. Also shows connection status and IPv6 info.iStat Menus network monitor: Doesn’t really work on my MBP, maybe I should get rid of it.Bluetooth: I toggle Bluetooth via an AppleScript I run via LaunchBar so it’s just there to indicate Bluetooth is turned off as I usually don’t need it except for very rarely tethering stealthily to my iPhone (without a dock cable).iStat Menus temperature: Of my GPU (right) and CPU (left) and many more sensors in the menu when opened.AppleScript: Rarely used, I maybe should get rid of it.iSync: Actually only used to access the “Sync conflicts” dialog when I need to. I don’t sync with MobileMe as I don’t trust my data to it.Keychain: My indicator to make sure all my keychains are locked when I have to leave my machine. (I use the keyboard to actually lock my screen whenever I have to leave my screen, even if only for a moment.)ClamXav: Open source antivirus to check the occasional download for malware so I don’t accidentally send something infected on to some poor Windows soul. Should catch the few Mac native malwares as well as macro nasties.Growl: Only to restart Growl when it has gone wonky again. I should be able to get rid of that one as the last update has fixed a lot of instabilities. Notifications themselves are to be kept at a minimum and for emergency information only.Espionage: “Encrypts folders” by putting their contents into a .sparsebundle and automounting said image in place of the folder. Makes selectively encrypting data comfortable.MacFusion 2: Simple GUI frontend to MacFUSE comfortably access remote filesystems via SSH or to mount FTP servers with write support in the Finder (which it still doesn’t do natively for no apparent reason).Visor: The ultimate accessory to access a Terminal in the blink of an eye. (Yeah I know, one shouldn’t blink at any give time.)SMARTReporter: Displays the S.M.A.R.T. status of all internal disks and goes red alert if a disk thing it might go bad in the not too distant future. S.M.A.R.T. is never guaranteed to tell you about impending disk failures. So please always have a least one good and current backup! Better more than that!gfxCardStatus: Allows me to manually switch from integrated to dedicated graphics on my MacBook Pro to get some additional battery life when on the road (and I don’t need the graphics power).Keyboard Maestro: To remap a few keys and have instant triggers for a few things like being able to control my iTunes volume via the volume keys (and being able to set the system volume with the same keys separately). Comes in very handy when using iTunes with AirPlay speakers. Haven’t yet found many other use cases for me yet.AirVideo Server: The Mac server part to watch movies from my MacBook Pro on my iPad via the corresponding iOS AirVideo client app for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad (Universal). Does on-the-fly transcoding of video files that are in a format which cannot be played back directly on iOS devices.TextExpander: The swiss army knife of text input manipulation. Saves me countless hours of typing action for boilerplate foo and also does a lot of practical stuff like URL shortening with j.mp for twitter or entering obscure Unicode characters. (Disclosure: I am the author of these free TextExpander snippets.)Dropbox: For occasionally sharing a few files with the family. I don’t use it to sync files across my own Macs.Dropbox: Another Dropbox account for the austrian chapters of Cocoaheads, the international Mac and iOS developer’s community. To better distinguish between them I use one icon in monochrome and one in colour.SizeUp: Window manipulation with the keyboard to which I am seeking an alternative as it doesn’t allow me to assign the keyboard shortcuts I want to have. (Mainly using the fn key which is not an option with SizeUp.)Degrees: A simple display of the current outside temperature and weather conditions. Very handy when working in the data center catacombs where you don’t have a window.AeroFS: A privately synched filesystem not unlike Dropbox but without the cloud server to keep your data a little more confidenial than Dropbox. (Currently in private beta.)OmniFocus: Shows the due and overdue tasks of my favorite todo management application. (Please don’t ask about the count…) Also available as OmniFocus for iPhone and Omnifocus for iPad which perfectly sync with each other over my private WebDAV server (or other ways if you prefer). (From Pepi Zawodsky, Mac OS X Server systems administrator and iOS developer)


Most of my menubar icons are used as indicators for monitoring certain aspects of my system. I rarely click on any of them as I do almost everything via the keyboard.
From right to left:
Spotlight: I really should get rid of that one as I never use it. Instead I’m using LaunchBar for searching.
Clock: With weekday display.
iStat Menus Calendar: To keep an eye on the date. Also helps me keep track of several world clocks.
Input Method: I’m mostly using my Austrian (German) keyboard. Also gives me access to Kotoeri (Japanese) as well as keyboard viewer and character palette.
Battery: Obviously I’m on a MacBook Pro, so having charge status visible is vital.
Volume: To keep an eye on the audio output. I use the keyboard to actually change volume. Rarely used to check audio input and output (by holding ⌥ while clicking it).
AirPort: Mostly used for monitoring my WiFi connection. Rarely used to actually connect to a network as my MBP usually knows the networks I connect to. Even more rarely used to gain technical details about the associated to access point.
Displays: Put quite on the right hand side on purpose if a projector uses a very low resolution and my Mac decides to mirror displays. That way I can still easily get to it, just in case. Think of it as an emergency icon. (I could probably get rid of that one as I usually use LaunchBar to open the Displays PrefPanel anyway.)
Time Machine: I never fully trust Time Machine. This helps me to check if it is working properly.
iStat Menus CPU Bars: To keep an eye on my CPU’s load. Rarely used to spot a CPU hogging process. (I usually do that in a Terminal via Visor. (See below!))
MenuMeters: A paging indicator (to know of excessive swapping action) and my memory usage pie chart. (iStat Menus doesn’t have a paging indicator). Too bad I cannot turn off the chart and have only the paging indicator there, or have iStat Menus give me a paging indicator instead.
iStat Menus Memory: Memory usage graph to easily spot applications that suddenly grab a huge chunk of RAM.
VPN: To connect to my customer’s networks all around and to protect my connections when using untrusted networks. (So pretty much any network except for my own.)
Dial up: To connect one of those pesky USB UMTS/3G modems.
iStat Menus disk monitors: To keep an eye on disk usage. The leftmost is my system partition and usually way too full for my SSD to be comfortable.
iStat Menus disk throughput: To check for SSD/HD/USB stick speeds during lenghty copy operations or when recovering data from faulty media.
MenuMeters network graph: Gives more comprehensive info of my interfaces and a cubic root scaled graph which I prefer over iStat Menu’s way to display this data. Also shows connection status and IPv6 info.
iStat Menus network monitor: Doesn’t really work on my MBP, maybe I should get rid of it.
Bluetooth: I toggle Bluetooth via an AppleScript I run via LaunchBar so it’s just there to indicate Bluetooth is turned off as I usually don’t need it except for very rarely tethering stealthily to my iPhone (without a dock cable).
iStat Menus temperature: Of my GPU (right) and CPU (left) and many more sensors in the menu when opened.
AppleScript: Rarely used, I maybe should get rid of it.
iSync: Actually only used to access the “Sync conflicts” dialog when I need to. I don’t sync with MobileMe as I don’t trust my data to it.
Keychain: My indicator to make sure all my keychains are locked when I have to leave my machine. (I use the keyboard to actually lock my screen whenever I have to leave my screen, even if only for a moment.)
ClamXav: Open source antivirus to check the occasional download for malware so I don’t accidentally send something infected on to some poor Windows soul. Should catch the few Mac native malwares as well as macro nasties.
Only to restart Growl when it has gone wonky again. I should be able to get rid of that one as the last update has fixed a lot of instabilities. Notifications themselves are to be kept at a minimum and for emergency information only.
Espionage: “Encrypts folders” by putting their contents into a .sparsebundle and automounting said image in place of the folder. Makes selectively encrypting data comfortable.
MacFusion 2: Simple GUI frontend to  comfortably access remote filesystems via SSH or to mount FTP servers with write support in the Finder (which it still doesn’t do natively for no apparent reason).
Visor: The ultimate accessory to access a Terminal in the blink of an eye. (Yeah I know, one shouldn’t blink at any give time.)
SMARTReporter: Displays the S.M.A.R.T. status of all internal disks and goes red alert if a disk thing it might go bad in the not too distant future. S.M.A.R.T. is never guaranteed to tell you about impending disk failures. So please always have a least one good and current backup! Better more than that!
gfxCardStatus: Allows me to manually switch from integrated to dedicated graphics on my MacBook Pro to get some additional battery life when on the road (and I don’t need the graphics power).
Keyboard Maestro: To remap a few keys and have instant triggers for a few things like being able to control my iTunes volume via the volume keys (and being able to set the system volume with the same keys separately). Comes in very handy when using iTunes with AirPlay speakers. Haven’t yet found many other use cases for me yet.
: The Mac server part to watch movies from my MacBook Pro on my iPad via the corresponding iOS AirVideo client app for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad (Universal). Does on-the-fly transcoding of video files that are in a format which cannot be played back directly on iOS devices.
TextExpander: The swiss army knife of text input manipulation. Saves me countless hours of typing action for boilerplate foo and also does a lot of practical stuff like URL shortening with j.mp for twitter or entering obscure Unicode characters. (Disclosure: I am the author of these free TextExpander snippets.)
Dropbox: For occasionally sharing a few files with the family. I don’t use it to sync files across my own Macs.
Dropbox: Another Dropbox account for the austrian chapters of Cocoaheads, the international Mac and iOS developer’s community. To better distinguish between them I use one icon in monochrome and one in colour.
SizeUp: Window manipulation with the keyboard to which I am seeking an alternative as it doesn’t allow me to assign the keyboard shortcuts I want to have. (Mainly using the fn key which is not an option with SizeUp.)
Degrees: A simple display of the current outside temperature and weather conditions. Very handy when working in the data center catacombs where you don’t have a window.
AeroFS: A privately synched filesystem not unlike Dropbox but without the cloud server to keep your data a little more confidenial than Dropbox. (Currently in private beta.)
OmniFocus: Shows the due and overdue tasks of my favorite todo management application. (Please don’t ask about the count…) Also available as OmniFocus for iPhone and Omnifocus for iPad which perfectly sync with each other over my private WebDAV server (or other ways if you prefer).
(From , Mac OS X Server systems administrator and iOS developer)

BetterTouchTool, which is used to enhance gesture by trackpad (I basically use it to flick from spaces to spaces and trigger Exposé). You can also buy it from the App Store if you wish to fund the author.CloudApp, a Dropbox challenger. A little bit different, though, it’s more about quick upload than managing a directory. With a simple shortcut, you’ll upload a selected file, and they’ll directly paste to the clipboard a short link. The biggest drawback for now is that this link is a link of a viewer, and you must go there to pick the direct link, which is not convenient. By the way, it also lets you know by clicking the menubar icon how many views an item has reached.Dropbox, Apple should have done it.Evernote, I use it sometimes, to store ideas that come to my mind, quotes I hear, it’s quite useful, but it probably needs to be more organized. But it’s free, and communicate from iOS to OS X, and the search engine is perfect.gfxCardStatus, this little utility lets me choose which graphic card I want to use (Nvidia or Intel Chip), and trigger the behavior (I can activate one of them, or both like the original behavior). Next to the Wi-fi icon, MenuMeters helps me to monitor my RAM use and CPU load (so I can see numbers dramatically increase when I launch Chrome and it displays Flash content). Next to it, it’s MobileMe’s sync icon. And there is, of course, a launcher, but it’s invisible. I use Quicksilver, because my only need is to quickly launch apps, and I don’t like Alfred’s focus (when you use Alfred you lose your focus, it doesn’t act like a bezel, but like a separate app, and I don’t like this). Oh, and the right part is written in Mandarin Chinese, and as I’m French, I use my Taiwanese Mac with the American layout, so I can write French and English without missing a single character or accent, and switch to zhuyin when needed :). (From formose)

BetterTouchTool, which is used to enhance gesture by trackpad (I basically use it to flick from spaces to spaces and trigger Exposé). You can also buy it from the App Store if you wish to fund the author.
CloudApp, a Dropbox challenger. A little bit different, though, it’s more about quick upload than managing a directory. With a simple shortcut, you’ll upload a selected file, and they’ll directly paste to the clipboard a short link. The biggest drawback for now is that this link is a link of a viewer, and you must go there to pick the direct link, which is not convenient. By the way, it also lets you know by clicking the menubar icon how many views an item has reached.
Dropbox, Apple should have done it.
Evernote, I use it sometimes, to store ideas that come to my mind, quotes I hear, it’s quite useful, but it probably needs to be more organized. But it’s free, and communicate from iOS to OS X, and the search engine is perfect.
gfxCardStatus, this little utility lets me choose which graphic card I want to use (Nvidia or Intel Chip), and trigger the behavior (I can activate one of them, or both like the original behavior).
Next to the Wi-fi icon, MenuMeters helps me to monitor my RAM use and CPU load (so I can see numbers dramatically increase when I launch Chrome and it displays Flash content). Next to it, it’s MobileMe’s sync icon.
And there is, of course, a launcher, but it’s invisible. I use Quicksilver, because my only need is to quickly launch apps, and I don’t like Alfred’s focus (when you use Alfred you lose your focus, it doesn’t act like a bezel, but like a separate app, and I don’t like this). Oh, and the right part is written in Mandarin Chinese, and as I’m French, I use my Taiwanese Mac with the American layout, so I can write French and English without missing a single character or accent, and switch to zhuyin when needed :). (From formose)

Echofon - The least lame Twitter client I’ve tried.Sparrow - Recently been trying out this slick little IMAP email client.Dropbox (Flash Drives have now joined Floppy Disk and Zip Disk in the retirement home.) Utility for the scanner function on the Canon MG5220 Multifunction machine. I actually use Image Capture to actually scan, but it breaks if I remove this.Contour Design ShuttleXpress controller - The device itself was designed for video editing, but I use it for brush resizing and zooming in/out in Photoshop and Illustrator. Buttons are mapped to key modifiers. (Way better than Express Keys on my Wacom Tablet.Evernote - Necessity when working on multiple devices.Jumpcut - Multi-item clipboard utility. Only handles text, but does it well.Transmit - Nice FTP/S3 transfersiChat, MenuMeters, Time Machine, Blutetooth, AirPort Signal, Keyboard/Character Viewer (for when I can’t remember how to type certain oddball characters), Media Eject, Clock, and Spotlight, which I pretty much use as an app launcher. (From Mike Shoaf)

 - The least lame Twitter client I’ve tried.
 - Recently been trying out this slick little IMAP email client.
Dropbox (Flash Drives have now joined Floppy Disk and Zip Disk in the retirement home.)
Utility for the scanner function on the Canon MG5220 Multifunction machine. I actually use Image Capture to actually scan, but it breaks if I remove this.
controller - The device itself was designed for video editing, but I use it for brush resizing and zooming in/out in Photoshop and Illustrator. Buttons are mapped to key modifiers. (Way better than Express Keys on my Wacom Tablet.
 - Necessity when working on multiple devices.
Jumpcut - Multi-item clipboard utility. Only handles text, but does it well.
Transmit - Nice FTP/S3 transfers
iChat, MenuMeters, Time Machine, Blutetooth, AirPort Signal, Keyboard/Character Viewer (for when I can’t remember how to type certain oddball characters), Media Eject, Clock, and Spotlight, which I pretty much use as an app launcher.
(From Mike Shoaf)

MailMate notification - The fantastic lightweight IMAP mail client from Benny Kjær Nielsen.CoverSutra - A recent discovery I use to control iTunes without needing to switch back to the main application window.PopChar X - This utility saves me so much time finding the right characters.Skitch - Essential for marking-up screenshots and hosting my blog images.TextExpander - I rely on this to correct common spelling mistakes but also for its ability to shorten URLs and insert text from snippets.Delibar - I use Delibar to capture ‘things I would like to become bookmarks’ while I’m away from my main computer, sending them to Pinboard.I Love Stars - In the same way that CoverSutra lets me control iTunes when it’s not visible, I Love Stars lets me assign ratings. I definitely give it ★★★★★.f.lux - The jury’s still out on this utility that changes my computer display to a warmer night mode automatically.Tags - One of a number of applications that allow me to use OpenMeta to manage files.QuickCursor - This great little utility allows you to use your favourite text editor to input data into web browsers. The great advantage of this is it does away with the need for an input manager.App Tamer - The idea is that this pauses an application when you switch away from it, then automatically restarts it when you start using it again to save battery life.SlimBatteryMonitor - I’ve had this on every Mac I’ve ever owned and it does just what it says on the tin.TextSoap 7 - TextSoap is one of those apps that’s barely visible but saves a huge amount of time. I’ve previously written about it and since then it has been updated and gained a menu bar icon as a result.MenuMeters - Another of those apps I have used forever. Here it is set to display network, traffic, memory usage and CPU levels. Very useful to see if anything is hogging your computer. Apple’s standard language and text input menu, AirPort indicator and Clock.Search - This is Tags’ Enhanced Spotlight. (From Steve Hodgson)

MailMate notification - The fantastic lightweight IMAP mail client from Benny Kjær Nielsen.
CoverSutra - A recent discovery I use to control iTunes without needing to switch back to the main application window.
PopChar X - This utility saves me so much time finding the right characters.
Skitch - Essential for marking-up screenshots and hosting my blog images.
TextExpander - I rely on this to correct common spelling mistakes but also for its ability to shorten URLs and insert text from snippets.
Delibar - I use Delibar to capture ‘things I would like to become bookmarks’ while I’m away from my main computer, sending them to Pinboard.
- In the same way that CoverSutra lets me control iTunes when it’s not visible, I Love Stars lets me assign ratings. I definitely give it ★★★★★.
f.lux - The jury’s still out on this utility that changes my computer display to a warmer night mode automatically.
Tags - One of a number of applications that allow me to use to manage files.
QuickCursor - This great little utility allows you to use your favourite text editor to input data into web browsers. The great advantage of this is it does away with the need for an input manager.
App Tamer - The idea is that this pauses an application when you switch away from it, then automatically restarts it when you start using it again to save battery life.
SlimBatteryMonitor - I’ve had this on every Mac I’ve ever owned and it does just what it says on the tin.
TextSoap 7 - TextSoap is one of those apps that’s barely visible but saves a huge amount of time. I’ve previously and since then it has been updated and gained a menu bar icon as a result.
MenuMeters - Another of those apps I have used forever. Here it is set to display network, traffic, memory usage and CPU levels. Very useful to see if anything is hogging your computer.
Apple’s standard language and text input menu, AirPort indicator and Clock.
Search - This is Tags’ Enhanced Spotlight.
(From Steve Hodgson)

Notes: 2 5/30/11 — 6:02pm Filed under: #MailMate  #CoverSutra  #PopChar  #Skitch  #TextExpander  #Delibar  #I Love Stars  #Flux  #Tags  #QuickCursor  #App Tamer  #SlimBatteryMonitor  #TextSoap  #MenuMeters  #Input  #AirPort  #Clock  #submission 
From the right (since that’s the order they’re added to the menubar): System defaults: Spotlight, Time (I’m a 24hr kinda guy), Battery, Input Language (for when I want to use Japanese characters), Volume, Network, Time Machine.MenuMeters: RAM on the right, CPU on the left. I really only use this to keep an eye on how many more virtual machines I can open. There’s also iStat Menus, which has way more features, if you prefer that. MenuMeters is more limited, and I like it that way.Sparrow: Can’t live without this one. It’s the prettiest and most usable mail application I’ve found as of yet. I tend to keep my inbox totally empty, and this helps manage that. I’ve got the dock icon disabled too…Adium: I still prefer this for chatting, although I use Linkinus for IRC. I only use iChat for video chat or screen sharing.GrowlTunes: Did I mention I hate daemon apps that put icons in your menubar and/or dock? This is one of them, but I also really like having my music growling. Trade-offs, eh. It’s in the extras folder of the Growl disk image.Cloud: Cannot live without this one. I use Cloud App constantly when I’m chatting with people, to send screenshots or things from Photoshop. It uploads it to their service and puts a shortened link to it in your clipboard. It also ties into the default screenshot shortcuts.Linkinus: IRC Client. Keeps IRC looking good. Kinda has a daemon mode where you can quit the app, but it leaves the icon in the menu bar and keeps you connected and notified of highlights and messages. It’s 10 bucks on the App Store last I checked. It’s €19.99 on their site. (From Shelby Munsch)

From the right (since that’s the order they’re added to the menubar):
System defaults: Spotlight, Time (I’m a 24hr kinda guy), Battery, Input Language (for when I want to use Japanese characters), Volume, Network, Time Machine.
MenuMeters: RAM on the right, CPU on the left. I really only use this to keep an eye on how many more virtual machines I can open. There’s also iStat Menus, which has way more features, if you prefer that. MenuMeters is more limited, and I like it that way.
Sparrow: Can’t live without this one. It’s the prettiest and most usable mail application I’ve found as of yet. I tend to keep my inbox totally empty, and this helps manage that. I’ve got the dock icon disabled too…
Adium: I still prefer this for chatting, although I use Linkinus for IRC. I only use iChat for video chat or screen sharing.
: Did I mention I hate daemon apps that put icons in your menubar and/or dock? This is one of them, but I also really like having my music growling. Trade-offs, eh. It’s in the extras folder of the Growl disk image.
Cloud: Cannot live without this one. I use Cloud App constantly when I’m chatting with people, to send screenshots or things from Photoshop. It uploads it to their service and puts a shortened link to it in your clipboard. It also ties into the default screenshot shortcuts.
Linkinus: IRC Client. Keeps IRC looking good. Kinda has a daemon mode where you can quit the app, but it leaves the icon in the menu bar and keeps you connected and notified of highlights and messages. It’s 10 bucks last I checked. It’s €19.99 on their site.
(From Shelby Munsch)

Notes: 1 5/23/11 — 5:54am Filed under: #MenuMeters  #Sparrow  #Adium  #CloudApp  #Linkinus  #Clock  #Battery  #Input  #Volume  #Time Machine  #AirPort  #GrowlTunes  #submission 
I just removed unnecessary icons in my menubar; I used to also have Skype, Adium, iSync, and Spotlight. Now I only have these: Pyrcast, CalendarBar, Mailplane, Dropbox, SlimBatteryMonitor, MenuMeters, Time Machine, Bluetooth, WiFi, and Clock. (From Andrew Ng)

I just removed unnecessary icons in my menubar; I used to also have , Adium, iSync, and Spotlight. Now I only have these: Pyrcast, CalendarBar, Mailplane, Dropbox, SlimBatteryMonitor, MenuMeters, Time Machine, Bluetooth, WiFi, and Clock.
(From Andrew Ng)

Notes: 1 5/7/11 — 12:00pm Filed under: #Pyracast  #CalendarBar  #Mailplane  #Dropbox  #SlimBatteryMonitor  #MenuMeters  #Time Machine  #Bluetooth  #AirPort  #Clock  #submission