No commits linked
Connect GitHub to see your commits here
Packaging now checks this resource lookup before release, so a broken Settings bundle should fail the build instead of reaching users.
Fixed the remaining packaged Settings crash caused by the KeyboardShortcuts bundle being looked up from the wrong app bundle path.
Fixed the packaged app missing SwiftPM resource bundles needed by Settings, so opening Settings in the installed production build works instead of crashing.
Restored the custom DMG layout with the Supermac background and the app/Applications icons arranged in the right places.
Choose the global shortcut that opens Supermac from Settings. Cmd+Shift+Space stays the default, and the new Use Cmd+Space action can hand Spotlight's shortcut to Supermac with a fallback if macOS refuses it.
Connect AI providers, refresh model catalogs, choose fallback models, and route different Supermac AI functions to the model or provider that makes sense for the job.
The desktop side is ready for the Android companion app: QR pairing, live status, action panes, remote decks, file upload/download, remote screen, remote input, AI chat sockets, notification mirroring, and quick settings tiles are wired into the Mac API.
The AI tab is now in Settings. It brings provider setup, model routing, agent configuration, skill sources, tool selection, and quick parsing controls into one place. The UI still needs polish, but the real AI control surface is here.
Chat with Codex, Cursor, Claude, Pi, or custom ACP agents from Supermac. Conversations keep history, show tool activity, support queued messages, image attachments, skill mentions, and per-agent workspaces.
MCP support can now be enabled from the local API settings so external agents can discover selected Supermac capabilities and call into approved desktop actions through the same local control layer.
Create voice agents, choose what Mac-control tools they can use, and call them from Supermac or the companion API. Voice agents can work with screen capture, pointer cues, app actions, and other hands-free workflows.
Add Quick Event is now available as a root command. Type a plain-language event, then let the built-in parser or AI parser turn it into calendar fields before saving.
The local API now has a real Settings surface and routes for status, actions, approvals, launcher items, clipboard, files, remote screen, remote input, and voice workflows. It is the desktop-side foundation for companion apps and automations.
Supermac now packages a local Computer Use backend for agent workflows. Agents can use enabled tools to inspect windows, click, type, scroll, drag, press hotkeys, and work with the Mac through the bundled CUA driver or AppleScript fallback.
Add Quick Reminder is now available as its own root command. Type the reminder naturally, parse the title, due date, time, and list, then save it straight to Reminders.
Reminders can be searched directly, opened in their own stack, and pinned into root search so important tasks stay near the top with due-time context and countdowns.