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Glaze turns AI prompts into custom Mac apps in minutes

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Glaze is a new Mac app for making your own software. It’s for vibe coding, meaning you just describe any kind of tool, game, or app you want to create. Glaze builds it. It’s like having a friend who codes and is happy to add whatever small feature you ask for. How Glaze is different: Unlike other vibe coding tools, like Lovable, Bolt, Gemini Canvas, Google’s AI Studio, or Claude Artifacts, Glaze creates software that runs locally on your computer, not on the web. That means: Your apps work offline. Your data stays on your machine. Apps you make benefit from your computer’s file system, keyboard shortcuts, menu bar integration, and background processes. They’re more like real software than the browser apps other vibe coding tools generate. Platform and Pricing: It’s Mac-only for now. It’s free to use with limits, or $20/month for additional credits. Join the waitlist at glaze.app to get an invite. The Team: Glaze comes from the startup that makes Raycast, my favorite launcher app. The First Apps I Made with Glaze I began by making tiny apps. Four steps: plan, create, refine, and publish. Box Breath: One-minute meditation breaks. Built in 12 minutes. A links app for storing URLs I use often, so I can copy them to my clipboard quickly. Built in 10 minutes. QuotePop, which can turn any text or quote into an image file. I use the images for presentations and social sharing. I can customize the image dimensions, style, and gradient background. Built in an hour. Free Public Glaze Apps I Like macHealth Identify battery, memory, or other issues impacting your laptop. Quickly find out why your Mac is slow. Pinfont Preview text across all your fonts to pick one you like. Focus Soundboard Play sounds together to help you focus. Silly Sounds Press keys to make playful noises. Useful for nothing in particular. Word Connections An offline version of the NY Times game. PDF and Image Merger Combine multiple PDFs and images. How to Get Started Join the waitlist at glaze.app. When you’re invited, download & install Glaze. Explore the Glaze “store,” a collection of free apps people have built. Download and try a few to see what’s possible. Open Glaze’s planning mode. Explain in detail what kind of app or game you want. As Glaze prepares your app, it may ask about your feature or design preferences. Answer those questions. Once you’re happy with Glaze’s plan, which it will summarize for you, tell it to build. Then test the app and ask for improvements. Keep your app private or publish it to a group or the public store. Pro Tips Customize Glaze’s Instructions. Summarize your preferences in Glaze’s settings. That way your apps will have your preferred design elements or features. Include options for your apps. Instruct Glaze to give anyone using your app choices. In my QuotePop app, for example, you can pick your image dimensions, background color, and font. Plan first. The clearer you are about what you want before Glaze starts building, the fewer credits you’ll burn on rework. Put Glaze in planning mode to start. Or, if you already pay for another AI tool like Claude or ChatGPT, plan there and give Glaze a summary. That saves your Glaze credits for building. Iterate to improve. Once Glaze builds the first version of your app, give it a list of fixes to improve the app’s design or make it easier to use. Limitations Mac only for now. No specific timeline for Windows and Linux. Credits for complex apps may be costly. More intricate iterations use more credits. If you’re using Glaze for free, you may run out of credits and have to pay for more. If you’re making multiple complex apps, expect to pay $20/month for a subscription, at least while you’re building and refining. Local only, not mobile. If you use multiple computers, you’ll have to install and use Glaze separately on each. You won’t be able to use your apps on your phone or tablet, as you can with web apps. Alternatives Lovable lets you create sites and apps with no code. Start with a text prompt, attach a screenshot of something you like, or build on the template gallery. Bolt also lets you make a web app or landing page with AI prompts. You can use your brand guidelines to match company designs. Claude Artifacts works well for quick interactives like flashcards, quizzes, calculators, minigames, and simple visualizations. Unlike Glaze, Claude Artifacts and the other alternatives noted here don’t create local software that lives on your computer. Gemini Canvas is easy to use for building apps, games, dashboards, or interactive infographics inside Gemini. Feed in a document to have Canvas design an app around it. Make a quiz game from your vocabulary list, or a dashboard from your metrics file. Google has several other good free options. Each has useful templates to help get you started. AI Studio is its most powerful, though the interface can be intimidating for beginners. Stitch lets you vibe code mobile app designs. And you can guide Opal to design Web apps by linking together various skills and steps. This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps.

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AI 分析

标题洞察

这个标题直接把“AI 提示词”转成“几分钟做出 Mac 应用”的结果,利益点很清晰,适合吸引对 AI 工具和效率工具敏感的读者。它的传播力来自“低门槛 + 高产出 + 时间承诺”三重刺激,适合改写成“用一句话做出一个本地应用”“AI 正在把开发门槛降到什么程度”这类标题。若借势写作,可以强调“不是做网页小工具,而是本地软件”这一差异化卖点。

核心观点

文章的核心判断是:Glaze 把 vibe coding 从网页应用推进到本地 Mac 软件,补上了离线使用、数据留在本机、调用文件系统和快捷键等能力。作者还通过自己做的几个小应用说明,它更适合快速做“轻量但实用”的个人工具,而不是一上来就追求复杂产品。需要注意的是,它目前仍有明显边界:仅支持 Mac、复杂应用会消耗更多 credits,也不能像网页应用那样跨设备和手机直接使用。

创作启发

可以写成“本地 AI 造软件”和“网页 AI 造软件”的对比短文,重点讲两者在隐私、离线、系统能力上的差别。也可以做成实测类内容,比如记录“我用一句提示词做了 3 个 Mac 小工具”的过程,强调从规划、生成到迭代的工作流。另一个可延展角度是“哪些日常需求最适合用 Glaze 这类工具解决”,例如剪贴板管理、专注工具、文件合并、图片生成等,便于做成清单型图文或视频。