
Vim Python IDE
Burly.click
OpenIn
Choosy
Finicky
Bartender Mac App
EasyFinder
Hidden Bar
Homebrew Browser
Most people don't run one browser anymore. They run several, split across profiles. Safari for personal, Chrome for work, a separate Chrome profile for development, maybe Firefox for testing. Each profile is its own world of logins, history, and extensions.
macOS never got the memo. Click a link in Mail, Slack, or Terminal and it opens in one fixed default browser, usually the wrong one. So you copy the URL, switch browsers, find the right profile, and paste. All day. Burly exists to delete that little tax.
When Burly is your default link handler, every external link pauses for a fraction of a second to ask one question: where does this belong? A compact, keyboard-first picker lists your browser profiles as the destinations, not just browsers, so the link lands in exactly the right context.
Vim Python IDE
Burly.clickNo features have been listed yet.
Burly.click's answer:
Profiles are the destination. Burly lists every browser profile (Safari Work, Chrome Personal, Chrome Dev) as a first-class choice, not buried in browser settings, and finds them automatically as they change. Make each one yours with an emoji or account photo, a curated petal color, and its own shortcut key, so the picker becomes a board of faces you recognize at a glance.
Burly.click's answer:
Plenty of macOS apps route links. Most pick a browser, charge for it, or hide behind a config file. Burly is free, native, and built around one idea: your browser profiles, Safari profiles included, are the destination.
Burly.click's answer:
Power users with multiple browsers installed for various reasons.
Burly.click's answer:
Burly is made by Matt Senter, an independent founder and developer who designs, builds, and ships small, focused products end to end. Burly is one of them, a tool he wanted on his own Mac and decided to make properly. No team, no investors, no roadmap by committee: just software built with care and shipped when it's ready.
Burly.click's answer:
The app is built in Swift