Skip to main content

This simple app changed how I use my Mac forever

The Paste Mac app, with its clipboard bar open and the Paste homepage in Safari.
Alex Blake / Digital Trends

Every time I sit down and use my Mac, I’m reminded that it’s full of advanced features and clever extras. Yet there’s one place that absolutely does not apply: the clipboard. Copying and pasting in 2023 feels like it’s stuck in the past with no prospect of salvation.

At least, it did feel that way until I came across an app called Paste. This superb utility has taken a knife to copying and pasting and made it… fun? I never thought I’d say that about such a mundane task, but here we are — it’s true.

Stacked with features

The Paste app in macOS, showing a range of items copied to the clipboard and displayed in Paste's clipboard bar.
Alex Blake / Digital Trends

Copying and pasting on a Mac is simple enough: you copy one thing, then you paste it somewhere else. But this approach is very limited. You can only have one item in your clipboard at once, and anything else copied there overwrites whatever was there before it. Plus, there’s no clipboard history, so once something is gone, it’s gone for good.

Paste, however, is far better by almost any metric. For one thing, it makes clipboard history much more, well, sane. You can store as many things on your clipboard as you like, going back forever. Activate its app shortcut (Cmd+Shift+V) and up pops the clipboard bar, which lets you browse through your copied text, images, links, and anything else.

A range of items in the Paste Mac app's clipboard bar. One item has been right-clicked, with the contextual menu visible.
Alex Blake / Digital Trends

Everything is color-coded and labeled with the app you copied it from. If you can’t see something you’re looking for, there’s a search box — or you can just start typing and the search begins right away. It’s designed so that you never end up losing something you’ve copied.

Pasting is just as enjoyable. Once something has been copied, you can double-click it in the clipboard bar and it’ll automatically be pasted into your most recently used app (standard Cmd+C and Cmd+V also work as usual). You can copy and paste multiple items at once, or use Command and a number to insert an item corresponding to that digit (Cmd+3 pastes the third item in your clipboard bar, for example).

You can even insert items in a specific order using a feature called Paste Stacks, which is activated when you copy something using Cmd+Shift+C. Until you close it, everything you copy using Cmd+C gets added to the stack; press Cmd+V to paste the items in order.

Elevating a simple action

A Pinboard in the Paste Mac app, showing images that have been placed into a folder.
Alex Blake / Digital Trends

There’s so much more on offer, too. Anything in your clipboard bar can be opened, previewed, renamed, or deleted. You can also tag items, which adds them to “Pinboards” that work like folders to keep things organized.

Even the app’s design has been carefully considered, with clear thumbnails and icons immediately telling you what something is and where it’s come from. If those thumbnails are too small or too large, you just need to drag the top of the clipboard bar to resize it to your liking.

The settings window for the Paste Mac app.
Alex Blake / Digital Trends

Everything is highly customizable, with shortcuts and rules you can define in the app’s settings, along with editable clipboard history length, iCloud sync, ignored apps (such as your password manager), and more.

It’s been created with so much care and attention that it instantly feels like one of the best Mac apps you can get – and that’s not something you’d expect to hear about a simple copy-and-paste app.

It just goes to show there is so much more that can be done than Apple has implemented — and that even the most straightforward of processes can be made better with clever coding, a gorgeous design, and a little elbow grease.

Ultimately, Paste doesn’t just fix the Mac’s clipboard — it does it in a way that Apple would be proud of. It’s so well designed that it feels like a natural extension of macOS, and that’s something you can only really say about the very best Mac apps.

Editors' Recommendations

Alex Blake
In ancient times, people like Alex would have been shunned for their nerdy ways and strange opinions on cheese. Today, he…
These are the 10 settings I always change on a new Mac
A MacBook Air on a desk with an open book in front of it.

Every time I buy a new Mac, there are a bunch of settings I change to improve the macOS experience. Some are quick tweaks that solve minor annoyances, while others are vital changes that make my Mac safer, faster, or just plain better.

I recently wrote about a few key settings to change in macOS Sonoma, but the ones contained in the article you’re perusing now aren’t just for Apple’s latest operating system. Whether you’re running an earlier version of macOS or are reading this long after Sonoma has become old news, there are plenty of macOS settings you can adjust to get more from your Mac.
Turn on FileVault

Read more
I’m finally ready to stop recommending Apple’s cheapest MacBook
Apple MacBook Air M1 open, on a table.

Apple’s MacBook lineup is a bit all over the place at the moment. It’s full of fantastic machines that trounce the competition, yet picking the right Mac for you has never been more confusing. But amid all the uncertainty, one thing is for sure: I can finally stop recommending the M1 MacBook Air.

For years now, the M1 MacBook Air has been a great choice for anyone looking to dip their toes into the world of Apple laptops. But three years after its launch, it’s no longer looking like the solid purchase it used to be.
A strong debut
M1 MacBook Air Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

Read more
I’m a laptop reviewer. Here’s why I still use a laptop from 2021
Apple MacBook Pro 14 front view showing display and keyboard deck.

I'm pretty much always using a new laptop as my daily driver -- whichever one that I'm testing for review. And in 2023 alone, I've reviewed almost 40 machines, ranging from near-budget machines with solid performance and impressive features all the way up to innovative devices like the HP Spectre Foldable PC.

But occasionally, there's a lull in new releases, which gives me a chance to do a gut check. Which laptop do I return to as my primary work machine? To my own surprise, it's none of the flashy new releases from 2023. It's a laptop from way back in 2021 that remains my favorite. Not coincidentally, it's the only laptop I've purchased myself in years. That laptop is the first-gen Apple MacBook Pro 14, and it's held up so well against the competition that I still haven't felt compelled to replace it. Here's why.
The display continues to blow me away

Read more