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Settle
Save your window layouts and bring them back in one click
A macOS window manager that remembers where your windows belong. Save a layout once. Switch with one click. Let automation handle the rest.
I built Settle because I kept rebuilding the same window setup over and over. Dock the laptop, drag the editor left, the browser right, terminal in the corner. Undock for a meeting, do it all again in reverse. After enough rounds of that I just wanted my Mac to remember.
So Settle does three things most window tools skip:
1. It remembers full arrangements as named workspaces. "Dev Setup", "Writing", "Meeting Mode", whatever fits how you work. One click brings the whole thing back, every window to its screen and spot.
2. It can move windows on its own. Dock a monitor and a layout applies. Reach a time you set and it switches. Open a specific app and it arranges around it. Monitor, time, and app triggers all live in one place, so the layout becomes something that reacts instead of something you rebuild.
3. The layout editor is visual. You drag blocks to say where windows go, with grid presets to start from. No config files, no terminal.
It is a native Swift app, signed and notarized by Apple, runs on macOS 14 and up, both Intel and Apple Silicon. It is a one-time $9.99, no subscription, no account. Seven days free with everything unlocked so you can try the whole thing before you decide.
One honest note for the curious: it is not on the Mac App Store. Window managers need cross-app Accessibility access to read and move other apps' windows, and the App Store sandbox blocks that at the system level. Direct download is the only way to make it actually work, so that is the route.
Launch week only: use LAUNCH25 at checkout for 25% off.
I am here all day. Honest feedback is very welcome, especially on anything in the first run that felt confusing.
About Settle on Product Hunt
“Save your window layouts and bring them back in one click”
Settle was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 4 upvotes and 3 comments, placing #158 on the daily leaderboard. A macOS window manager that remembers where your windows belong. Save a layout once. Switch with one click. Let automation handle the rest.
On the analytics side, Settle competes within Productivity, Developer Tools and Menu Bar Apps — topics that collectively have 1.2M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Settle performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Settle?
Settle was hunted by Gökhan Gökova. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of Settle including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
Hi Product Hunt,
I built Settle because I kept rebuilding the same window setup over and over. Dock the laptop, drag the editor left, the browser right, terminal in the corner. Undock for a meeting, do it all again in reverse. After enough rounds of that I just wanted my Mac to remember.
So Settle does three things most window tools skip:
1. It remembers full arrangements as named workspaces. "Dev Setup", "Writing", "Meeting Mode", whatever fits how you work. One click brings the whole thing back, every window to its screen and spot.
2. It can move windows on its own. Dock a monitor and a layout applies. Reach a time you set and it switches. Open a specific app and it arranges around it. Monitor, time, and app triggers all live in one place, so the layout becomes something that reacts instead of something you rebuild.
3. The layout editor is visual. You drag blocks to say where windows go, with grid presets to start from. No config files, no terminal.
It is a native Swift app, signed and notarized by Apple, runs on macOS 14 and up, both Intel and Apple Silicon. It is a one-time $9.99, no subscription, no account. Seven days free with everything unlocked so you can try the whole thing before you decide.
One honest note for the curious: it is not on the Mac App Store. Window managers need cross-app Accessibility access to read and move other apps' windows, and the App Store sandbox blocks that at the system level. Direct download is the only way to make it actually work, so that is the route.
Demo: https://youtu.be/6cjGTAphAds
Download: https://settle.gokhangokova.com/...
Launch week only: use LAUNCH25 at checkout for 25% off.
I am here all day. Honest feedback is very welcome, especially on anything in the first run that felt confusing.