Pica Clipper.
A clipboard with a memory.
macOS forgets the moment you copy something new. Pica Clipper doesn't. Everything you've copied this week — links, snippets, screenshots, file paths — kept in your menu bar, searchable, one click back onto the clipboard.
A stripe
on every clip.
Four kinds of things end up on your clipboard. Pica Clipper colors each one differently so you can scan the list and find what you're after without reading a word. The stripe says it before the preview does.
Three ways
back.
Type to find it.
You half-remember a word from it. Pica Clipper searches the entire list as you type — across last week, last month, every clip you've kept. Hit return on the one you wanted.
Or scroll by day.
You only remember when. Today, Yesterday, This Week, This Month, Older. Five bands across the list so you can land on roughly the right time and scroll the rest of the way. Or group by type instead — all the images from this week in one place.
Pin the ones
you keep reaching for.
Your email address. The IBAN. That one snippet of code. Pin them and they stay at the top of the list — outlined in a dashed border so they're impossible to miss — no matter how much else you copy on top.
Stays
on this
Mac.
A clipboard sees passwords, drafts, addresses, credit card numbers, the bit of code you copied out of frustration at 11pm. Pica Clipper keeps all of it on the Mac you're using — never to a cloud, never to us. There is no us to send it to.