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Product Hunt Supaste

Clipboard Manager for macOS

235
Traction Score
26
Discussions
Jun 8, 2026
Launch Date
View Origin Link

Product Positioning & Context

Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for Mac. Save copied text, links, images, files, code, colors, and screenshots in a beautiful searchable timeline.
Mac Productivity Menu Bar Apps

Related Ecosystem & Alternatives

Discover adjacent products, open-source repositories, and developer tools sharing similar technical architecture.

Deep-Dive FAQs

What is Supaste?
Supaste is a digital product or tool described as: Clipboard Manager for macOS
Where did Supaste originate?
Data for Supaste was aggregated directly from the Product Hunt community ecosystem, representing raw developer and early-adopter sentiment.
When was Supaste publicly launched?
The initial public indexing or launch date for Supaste within our tracked developer communities was recorded on June 8, 2026.
How popular is Supaste?
Supaste has achieved measurable traction, logging over 235 traction score and facilitating 26 recorded discussions or engagements.
Which technical categories define Supaste?
Based on metadata extraction, Supaste is categorized under topics such as: Mac, Productivity, Menu Bar Apps.
What are some commercial alternatives to Supaste?
Our semantic intelligence engine identifies potential commercial alternatives in the SaaS space, such as SuperShrimp, which offers overlapping value propositions.
How does the creator describe Supaste?
The original author or development team describes the product as follows: "Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for Mac. Save copied text, links, images, files, code, colors, and screenshots in a beautiful searchable timeline."

Community Voice & Feedback

[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Honestly like the app, but the price is a turn off. I can see where if a person truly cared about local only how this could be enticing, but more than half my copy pasting is between devices. Could there be an alternative to cloud where it integrates with a local self hosted option as the clipboard?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
This is one of those tools I can immediately imagine using during a messy building day. When I’m working on product copy, small design details, support replies, screenshots, links, colors, and random snippets, I constantly copy things that I know I’ll need again… and then somehow lose them five minutes later.I like that Supaste treats clipboard history more visually, not just as a long technical list. The local-first part also matters a lot for this kind of app, because clipboard history can easily include private product stuff, emails, credentials, or unfinished drafts.The one-time purchase is refreshing too. :))Curious how you think about search: is it mostly exact text search, or can it also help find things more loosely, like “that screenshot from the dashboard” or “the blue color I copied yesterday”?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
@soltwagner The visual timeline approach feels like the right fix for clipboard managers that turn into unreadable text dumps after an hour of deep work.Curious if the app-level filtering works reliably with Electron apps like Figma or VS Code, since they often report generic window titles instead of meaningful context? That’s usually where visual clipboard tools start to lose their edge over plain lists.
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Drag-and-drop clipboard. I love that!
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Local-first with a timeline that spans text, images, code, colors, and files in one searchable store is the hard part. Most clipboard managers pick one content type and add the others as an afterthought. I've hit the same mixed-type indexing tradeoffs when handling diverse data in a unified store. Do you use Core Data, SQLite, or something else for the local persistence layer?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Clean, native-feeling clipboard managers are weirdly rare on macOS, so this is welcome! Congrats on launching. Does history sync across devices, or stay local for privacy?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
As someone constantly juggling UTM parameters, ad copy variants, and brand hex codes, this looks like a massive lifesaver. Does Supaste allow you to pin or organize specific clippings into folders/tags for different campaigns?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
That's a clean take. Is cross-device sync on the roadmap, or is it intentionally local-only?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
I feel like every few years I convince myself I don't need a clipboard manager, and then spend the next week re-copying the same links, snippets, screenshots, and prompts 😅Love the visual-first approach. Congrats on the launch.
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Beautifully designed product! Well done : )
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
The local-first no-cloud call is the interesting bet! Is no-sync a privacy stance you're committed to or a v1 scope line you'll cross later with end-to-end encrypted sync? Cheers
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
How does it compare to the now native macOS Tahoe clipboard history? Nicely done!
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
Many people already rely on Alfred or Raycast clipboard history—what’s the specific 30-second demo workflow where Supaste clearly outperforms those options, and why is that advantage hard for a launcher to replicate?
[Redacted] • Jun 8, 2026
At first, I was like "Ok raycast has solved it already, and now it is native to macos" but when I'm seeing the interface, it looks really nice. I love how you use the dynamic island style.What if I already have an app that uses the notch? Could I use another UI?Congrats!
[Redacted] • Jun 2, 2026
Hey

I built Supaste because I kept losing useful things I copied throughout the day — links, screenshots, code snippets, colors, assets, email templates, and random text I needed again 10 minutes later.

Most clipboard managers felt either too plain or too messy for my workflow, so I wanted to make something more visual, fast, and easy to reuse.

Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for macOS. It saves what you copy into a beautiful visual timeline, lets you filter by app or content type, organize clips into custom categories, drag and drop items back into other apps, and paste recent clips instantly with shortcuts.

It’s built for people who copy a lot while working — designers, developers, marketers, founders, sales/support teams, and anyone who wants their Mac to remember what they copied.

A few things I focused on:
• Visual history instead of a plain list
• App and type filters
• Custom categories for projects, templates, and assets
• Quick Paste from anywhere
• Drag and drop from the notch/window
• Local-first, no cloud sync, no analytics
• One-time purchase, no subscription

I’d love to hear your feedback, ideas, and feature requests.

Thanks for checking out Supaste

Discovery Source

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Aggregated via automated community intelligence tracking.

Tech Stack Dependencies

No direct open-source NPM package mentions detected in the product documentation.

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Deep Research & Science

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