Site icon TechGit

How to take control of macOS notifications

Are you annoyed by how quickly the macOS notification banners that appear in the upper-right corner of the screen disappear? Has it ever annoyed someone you know? Is that person so frustrated with macOS notifications and multitasking that they write an 826-word attack against the preferred platform of many of their Verge colleagues?

Well, maybe I can help you make it a bit less annoying. All it takes is deciding which app notifications you’d like to keep on-screen, which you want to hide automatically, and which you’d prefer to only show up as a red badge on your dock.

A note: for these directions, I used a Mac loaded with macOS Ventura. If you have macOS Monterey or older, your directions and screens may be slightly different.

Notification settings for your screen

Notification settings in macOS Ventura.
Notification settings in macOS Ventura.
Screenshot: Umar Shakir / The Verge

You can make changes to how your Mac displays notifications by going to the notification settings:

At the top, you will see settings for the Notification Center, which has controls for global notification behaviors. You can make the following adjustments:

Notification settings for apps

You can change a variety of behaviors per app — in this case, Slack.
You can change a variety of behaviors per app — in this case, Slack.
Screenshot: Umar Shakir / The Verge

In that same notification settings screen, there’s a list of your apps. Each of those apps has its own settings, letting you take a fair amount of control of how (or whether) you want to get notified. To make these changes:

If you opt to have notifications on for the app, you can select the kind of alert you’d like to see in the upper-right corner of the screen. You have three choices:

After choosing the type of banner you prefer (or no banner), you’ll have additional options you can change per the app. For example, there’s an option to keep notifications more discreet by setting Show previews to Never within specific app settings.

You can also make it so that app pop-ups don’t automatically group within the Notification Center — which is the sidebar you get to by either clicking the upper-right corner of your screen or by swiping into your trackpad with two fingers from the right.

Choose how long a banner sticks around

Wait, come back! I don’t feel like clicking on the clock to open Notification Center to see you again.
Wait, come back! I don’t feel like clicking on the clock to open Notification Center to see you again.
Screenshot: Umar Shakir / The Verge

If you’d like the banner to stick around for a shorter or longer period of time — guess what? Frustratingly, Apple won’t let you do that. However, if you’re using a Mac that’s running macOS Catalina (10.15) or older, there’s a Terminal command you can use to change how long a notification banner sticks around. Follow along if you’d like to try this option out:

defaults write com.apple.notificationcenterui bannerTime 12

Now, your banners will stay for the number of seconds you typed in. Again, it’s important to note that this doesn’t work on newer versions of macOS, starting with macOS Big Sur. Also, this adjustment is global, so you can’t alter how long the notifications for specific apps stay.

So, take some time to look at all of your apps in the notification settings and decide which apps you really want to hear from and how you want to see notifications.

Unfortunately, having all of your notifications stay on your screen until you dismiss them is not going to satisfy everyone. “Yeah, that’s not what I want,” a Verge senior editor told me. “Now my screen is full.”

Original Article

FacebookTwitterTumblrRedditLinkedInHacker NewsDiggBufferGoogle ClassroomThreadsXINGShare
Exit mobile version