Tired of pasting production JWTs into random websites? Wring packs 12 essential dev tools into your macOS menu bar. 100% offline, zero tracking.

Be honest: how many Chrome tabs did you open today just to decode a JWT, prettify a JSON payload, or test a cursed Regex? More importantly, how many production secrets did you blindly paste into some random, ad-riddled website? Yeah, thought so.
Amidst the sea of "AI-powered web3" garbage on Product Hunt recently, a slick tool called Wring popped up, grabbed a solid 90 upvotes, and caught my eye.
Long story short: It’s a macOS menu bar app that packs 12 essential daily developer tools into one dropdown. We're talking JWTs, hashes, regex, JSON, Base64, timestamps, cron, colors, UUIDs, diffs, load monitoring, and dotenv secrets.
The absolute best part? It is 100% offline. No account required, zero analytics, no network access whatsoever. You can finally paste your production keys and tokens without breaking out in a cold sweat, wondering if the website owner is quietly logging your inputs to sell on the dark web.
While the comment section isn't exactly a warzone, the 90-point score speaks volumes about what developers actually want: tools that just work without harvesting your soul (or your data).
Wring is the definition of a pragmatic dev tool. Next time you're spinning up a shiny new cloud vps or debugging a broken API endpoint, having a reliable offline toolkit right at your fingertips is a game-changer. It solves one of the most stupid yet common security risks we face daily.
Bottom line: It's good, it's practical, and it completely lacks the BS buzzwords we're all sick of hearing. If you're on a Mac, give it a spin. It might just save you from a very awkward meeting with your SecOps team.
Source: Product Hunt - Wring