MacPaw has a track record. CleanMyMac. Setapp. ClearVPN. The tools are solid. Familiar, even.
Eney is different. It’s not just another utility. It’s an attempt to fix the scattered mess that is modern digital life.
MacPaw dropped the beta onto Setapp. People started using it. Feedback poured in. The goal wasn’t to build another chatbot that sits around waiting for instructions. They wanted an assistant that anticipates your needs. That adapts.
AI is everywhere. But most of it is exhausting. You stare at a cursor. You type. You wait. The cognitive cost is real, and our attention spans don’t stand a chance against it. MacPaw’s internal data backs this up. Users want interfaces that react, not tools that demand perfect prompts every three seconds. They want complexity turned into intuition.
During the beta, developers kept adding “skills.” They integrated third-party tools. The consensus from users? Nobody wants to build their own personal AI engine. That takes time. Eney offers a plug-and-play alternative.
It gets stuff done without draining your brain.
You hand off the tedious parts. Schedule management. File tidying. The busywork that sucks time from your day.
A morning briefing happens automatically. Eney scans your calendar. It pulls in global news. While you sip coffee, it synthesizes everything into a digest. No digging through tabs required.
It launches your other tools for you. Gmail. Browser searches. Your usual apps. One interface. Everything running from the start.
Need a summary of a two-hour video? A PDF translated? Files forwarded to a teammate? It handles that. Accelerating the workflow is just one part of the equation, though.
The real draw is how Eney learns.
Most AI waits. You have to prompt. It replies. Repeat.
Eney tries to act before you ask. If you tell it to organize your desktop, it doesn’t just execute a command blindly. It breaks down what it finds. Files by size. By type. By space occupied. Then it asks. Should I move this? Should I delete that duplicate? It extracts archives. It organizes contents. It asks for permission on the heavy lifting.
It shows its progress. It explains what it’s doing. It’s proactive in a way most assistants aren’t.
So, is it worth checking out?
“Eney feels personal. Never clunky.”
That’s the vibe. If the beta version gives you even a glimpse of the final product, your Mac might just become less of a chore to use. You can try it today. See how it moves the work forward for you. Or just watch the space fill up.
























