§ 1 The creator's hundred little copies
A content creator — newsletter writer, social manager, video producer — runs on small reusable fragments: a link to the latest video, a set of hashtags, a canned reply to a brand enquiry, a bio blurb, a UTM-tagged URL. They get pasted constantly, across a dozen apps. Maccy keeps them all one keystroke away.
§ 2 Pin the evergreen, queue the session
The evergreen stuff gets pinned: the channel links, the standard CTA, the media-kit URL, the three hashtag sets. The session stuff just accumulates — captions drafted, clips of copy moved between Notes and the scheduler — and recalls by number when needed. Recent Maccy versions keep images in history too, which helps when you're shuttling thumbnails and reference frames around.
Creation is mostly assembly. The faster you can place the piece you already made, the more you make.
§ 3 One calm, local place
No accounts, no sync, no subscription — a local-only menu-bar tool that just works across every app the creator touches. It's free and open source, and it stays out of the way. For someone juggling platforms all day, 'out of the way' is the whole value.
§ 4 Frequently asked questions
How does a content creator use a clipboard manager?
To keep reusable fragments — links, hashtag sets, canned replies, bios, UTM URLs — one keystroke away, and to shuttle captions and images between apps without re-copying.
Can it store images, not just text?
Recent versions of Maccy keep images in history alongside text, which helps when moving thumbnails and reference frames between apps.
Do I need to pay or sign in?
No. Maccy is free, open source and local-only — no account, no subscription, nothing synced to a server.