I really like the iPhone’s Dynamic Island, the pill-shaped cutout near the top of the device’s screen. It’s an aesthetically pleasing way to check your battery percentage, record voice notes, and control music playback, among many other things. Since many MacBooks have a display notch too, you can use an app to bring an iPhone-like Dynamic Island to your laptop. Doing this makes the cutout look like a useful design feature rather than an abrupt gap in the screen, and some apps even let you move the giant volume and brightness adjustment popups to the Dynamic Island.

Alcove brings the Dynamic Island to your Mac

The volume slider in Alcove's notch app.

Credit: Pranay Parab

I’ve been using Alcove on a MacBook without a notch and I’m still finding it pretty useful. This app’s developer is known to focus on design, just as they did with Klack—an app that makes your Mac’s keyboard sound vintage. Alcove’s neat status updates highlight useful information in a slick interface. It takes over your Mac’s volume and brightness adjustment popups and moves those to the notch. This is a better implementation than Apple’s giant popups, which hide a significant part of the screen temporarily—a problem they’ve since fixed on iOS.

You can also use Alcove to keep a tab on Focuses, changes in songs, and access playback controls. The app can even show some of these changes on your Mac’s lock screen. I also like the app’s animations, from the small visualizer that shows up when you play music to the different themes of the brightness and volume sliders. If you choose the Glow theme for the volume slider, the color of the slider changes from green to red when you exceed 80% volume. 

Alcove's settings window.

Credit: Pranay Parab

This app supports gestures, so you can use horizontal two-finger swipes on your MacBook to skip to the next song or go back to the previous song. You can use vertical swipes to expand playback controls or to dismiss live activities that show up in the notch. 

You can try all of the app’s features for a couple days without paying, and once the free trial is over, you’ll have to pay $17 to continue using the app. The price may be a bit steep for someone who just wants music playback controls and nothing else, but Alcove is among the few apps that truly recreates the iPhone’s Dynamic Island on your Mac, right down to all the delightful animations.

Other useful notch apps

There are lots of other apps that make good use of the MacBook’s notch, but these are my favorites: