Great for connecting to macs but poor elsewhereġ. If you enjoy using ToothFairy, please take a moment to rate it or leave a review. Fixed a problem where ToothFairy could show a Bluetooth connection failure error message for connections that the user did not initiate. Fixed a problem where the progress spinner could stay visible forever, even after the device disconnected. ToothFairy no longer reports that the sound output is not set when the device isn’t connected, anyway. An arrow with no circle indicates that the device is waiting to reconnect. An arrow in a solid circle indicates that the device is currently connected but in the process of disconnecting. The menu bar icon now shows when ToothFairy is fixing the sound output. The workaround is successful more often, avoids unnecessary disconnections when the sound output spontaneously fixes itself, and it better handles devices that have been put away or manually disconnected. Made various improvements to the workaround for the macOS issue that could prevent the sound output from being set when connecting a device. “A must for Mac or MacBook owners” -Mike Peterson, AppleToolBox “Ideal for AirPods” -Matt Bolton, Mac|Life “The ultimate ‘saved you a click’ app” -Dieter Bohn, The Verge The battery indicator works with devices that can show their battery level in the Bluetooth pane of System Preferences. Switching Bluetooth devices between multiple Macs requires that the Bluetooth device can be paired with more than one computer/phone at a time this is not supported by the current-generation Apple Magic Keyboard/Mouse/Trackpad. Please make sure the devices you want to connect have been paired to your Mac before using them with ToothFairy. Note: ToothFairy works with devices that can be connected via the macOS Bluetooth menu. Use with your Magic Mouse or Magic Keyboard to make sure the battery level doesn’t get too low, or to quickly reconnect them after charging or if they get disconnected. ToothFairy itself is also AppleScriptable, so you can control your devices from other apps (like Lacona) and automations. Run a shell script when the AirPods are connected or disconnected, for example to notify you or to launch or quit another app. With the Dock icon hidden, you can right-click (or Control-click) the menu bar icon to access the settings. Optionally hide the Dock icon so it only appears in the menu bar. ToothFairy automatically launches at login, so it’s always there when you need it. AirPods and Beats devices with an Apple W1 chip do not need to be manually disconnected, and you can set them to avoid accidental disconnections when pressing the hotkey multiple times. Disconnect a Bluetooth device by clicking the icon (or pressing the hotkey) again, so that you can switch back to your phone. ToothFairy can ensure that it uses the higher quality AAC codec when you only care about audio output: listening to music or video or playing a game. macOS will normally use the SCO codec if it thinks you’re going to use the microphone. Supports multiple Bluetooth audio devices you can choose a different icon and hotkey for each. Now you know that it’s safe to start playing music it won’t blast from your Mac’s internal speaker. It fills in to show they are connected and can also display a battery indicator. Click the hollow AirPods icon in the menu bar to switch to AirPods. (HomePod is not supported, as it is not a Bluetooth audio device.) Works with AirPods, as well as any Bluetooth device that you can connect to your Mac: headphones, speakers, headsets, game pad controllers, keyboards, mice, etc. ToothFairy streamlines this: just click an icon in the menu bar (or press a hotkey) to switch to the AirPods, and the icon always shows whether they’re connected. You can’t tell at a glance whether audio will play from the AirPods or your Mac’s built-in speaker, you have to dig into a Bluetooth submenu to connect, and then you have to go back to the menu to see when the AirPods are ready for use. Connect AirPods (or other Bluetooth headphones) to your Mac with a single click or keypress.ĪirPods are great, but they don’t work quite as smoothly with Macs as they do iPhones.
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