The Mac Zoom, done right
A pinch on the trackpad and Read it Big magnifies only the window you're using. The lens follows your cursor, you read and click right inside it, then it snaps back. What Apple's Zoom should have been, without a trip into System Settings.
No tutorial, no menus to learn. If you've ever pinched to zoom a photo, you already know how to use it.
Modifier (Option, by default) + pinch on the window that's giving you a hard time.
The lens magnifies live and follows your cursor. Clicks land on the real element: you actually work inside it.
Release and everything snaps back in ~150 ms. Or keep it fixed, if you're reading for a while.
True. It's powerful, it's free, and we use it too. Then one day you get tired of magnifying the whole screen just to read one label, and of hunting for the switch buried in System Settings → Accessibility. Here's the difference, no tricks:
| Apple Zoom / Hover Text | Read it Big | |
|---|---|---|
| What it magnifies | the whole screen, or just the text under the pointer | the single window you're working in |
| How you turn it on | shortcuts + system settings to configure | a trackpad gesture, from the app |
| Can you click? | Hover Text is read-only | yes: lens anchored to the cursor, you click the right element |
| Configure it your way? | Apple's one-size-fits-all | your case: modifier, level, fixed or gradual |
Sooner or later Apple will copy it, and Zoom will finally be useful. When that happens, we'll know we were right. In the meantime, here it is.
No problem, and no label. Read it Big is also for anyone who, past 45, squints at interfaces clearly designed by twenty-somethings on 5K monitors. Set a comfortable fixed level, and that impossible window becomes readable with a gesture, without declaring anything, without opening accessibility menus. Just bigger text, when you need it.
To magnify a window it has to "see" it (Screen Recording), know which one you're looking at (Accessibility) and receive the pinch gesture (Input Monitoring). These are the same permissions any serious system utility asks for: you grant them once, guided by the app's buttons, and never think about it again.
No. The window image stays on your Mac, gets shown magnified and thrown away. No upload, no analysis, no servers. We wouldn't know where to put your pixels, and we're not interested.
It magnifies only the window you need instead of the whole screen, turns on with a gesture instead of from System Settings → Accessibility, it's interactive (Hover Text is read-only) and you configure it your way. Apple's Zoom is still great: this is the focused version.
No, for a technical reason (the mechanism that intercepts the pinch can't run in the App Store sandbox). You'll find it on Gumroad, and soon on Setapp. Signed and notarized by Apple, so your Mac opens it without fuss.