u/helping_people01

I participated in the Microsoft AI Skills program. And got 4 voucher

I participated in the Microsoft AI Skills program. And got 4 voucher

I think the vouchers were distributed randomly, but I received four vouchers. I've already used two, and I still have two left.

If i pass all 4 exam in 2 month that is suspicious in my resume. So what i do now

u/helping_people01 — 4 days ago

I got tired of paying for a clipboard manager, so I built my own Clip | Free Forever clipboard

https://i.redd.it/j8rz7s3xm6ah1.gif

I've used a Mac for years and one thing has always quietly bugged me: the clipboard only remembers the last thing you copied.

Doesn't sound like a big deal, but think about how often you actually copy stuff. I'd copy a link, then grab some text off a website, then an image, then something out of a PDF — and within seconds the first thing was just gone. So I'd go back, find it, copy it again, and do the whole dance over. Multiply that by a few hundred times a day and it starts to drive you a little crazy.

So I figured, surely there's an app for this. And yeah — there were dozens. Some looked great, some had AI features, some synced through the cloud, some had every option you could imagine. But pretty much every one I actually liked eventually hit me with a subscription screen.

And I kept thinking… why am I paying every month just so my Mac can remember what I copied? Clipboard history feels like something that should just exist, not another monthly bill.

Eventually I stopped searching and just built the thing I actually wanted. That's how Kyiri Clip started.

I wasn't trying to make the most advanced clipboard manager out there. I just wanted one that felt like it belonged in macOS. Hit ⇧⌘V, find what you copied, paste it, done. No setup, no learning curve, nothing in the way.

Then, as I used it, I kept adding the little things I always wished these apps had:

  • Remembers text, rich text, images, files, and even content copied from PDFs
  • Search through everything you've copied in a second or two
  • Pin the stuff you reach for constantly so it never falls off
  • ⌘1–9 to instantly paste recent clips
  • Pdf also copy paste.
  • And the one I rely on most — your history is still there after a restart or shutdown. I wanted the clipboard to feel persistent, not temporary.

Privacy was a big one for me too, since a clipboard sees everything. So it all stays on your Mac — no accounts, no telemetry, no analytics, no cloud sync, no network code. Your history never leaves your computer. (Stuff copied from password managers gets ignored automatically too.)

I also decided early on I didn't want this to be another subscription. So it's completely free forever for personal and internal business use. No Pro tier, no monthly plan, nothing locked behind a paywall. Install it and use it.
https://kyiri.com/products/clip

I know how this reads — "guy builds app, posts about it on Reddit" — so I'll be upfront that it's mine. But I'm genuinely more interested in feedback than downloads right now. If you give it a shot, I'd love to hear what's missing, what annoys you, or what would actually make it part of your daily workflow. I want to keep improving it based on real input from people who live in their clipboard like I do.

Thanks for reading.

reddit.com
u/helping_people01 — 7 days ago

I got tired of paying for a clipboard manager, so I built my own Clip | Free Forever clipboard

https://preview.redd.it/x3rwbraub6ah1.png?width=1400&format=png&auto=webp&s=8c2d8b6baff50c2bcd4149ed58a69d26cd116a24

I've used a Mac for years and one thing has always quietly bugged me: the clipboard only remembers the last thing you copied.

Doesn't sound like a big deal, but think about how often you actually copy stuff. I'd copy a link, then grab some text off a website, then an image, then something out of a PDF — and within seconds the first thing was just gone. So I'd go back, find it, copy it again, and do the whole dance over. Multiply that by a few hundred times a day and it starts to drive you a little crazy.

So I figured, surely there's an app for this. And yeah — there were dozens. Some looked great, some had AI features, some synced through the cloud, some had every option you could imagine. But pretty much every one I actually liked eventually hit me with a subscription screen.

And I kept thinking… why am I paying every month just so my Mac can remember what I copied? Clipboard history feels like something that should just exist, not another monthly bill.

Eventually I stopped searching and just built the thing I actually wanted. That's how Kyiri Clip started.

I wasn't trying to make the most advanced clipboard manager out there. I just wanted one that felt like it belonged in macOS. Hit ⇧⌘V, find what you copied, paste it, done. No setup, no learning curve, nothing in the way.

Then, as I used it, I kept adding the little things I always wished these apps had:

  • Remembers text, rich text, images, files, and even content copied from PDFs
  • Search through everything you've copied in a second or two
  • Pin the stuff you reach for constantly so it never falls off
  • ⌘1–9 to instantly paste recent clips
  • Launches at login
  • And the one I rely on most — your history is still there after a restart or shutdown. I wanted the clipboard to feel persistent, not temporary.

Privacy was a big one for me too, since a clipboard sees everything. So it all stays on your Mac — no accounts, no telemetry, no analytics, no cloud sync, no network code. Your history never leaves your computer. (Stuff copied from password managers gets ignored automatically too.)

I also decided early on I didn't want this to be another subscription. So it's completely free forever for personal and internal business use. No Pro tier, no monthly plan, nothing locked behind a paywall. Install it and use it.
https://kyiri.com/products/clip

I know how this reads — "guy builds app, posts about it on Reddit" — so I'll be upfront that it's mine. But I'm genuinely more interested in feedback than downloads right now. If you give it a shot, I'd love to hear what's missing, what annoys you, or what would actually make it part of your daily workflow. I want to keep improving it based on real input from people who live in their clipboard like I do.

Thanks for reading.

reddit.com
u/helping_people01 — 7 days ago