Recently, a Mac application named “SlapMac” has sparked heated discussions in the developer community. This software, priced at $7 (approximately NT$225), has an extremely simple function—when you slap your laptop, it screams. However, this seemingly useless mini product surprisingly generated $5,000 in revenue within just three days, prompting many independent developers to rethink the essence of product planning and the market value of “fun.”
Give your Mac a “sense of pain”
Launched by developer Tonino Catapano (@tonnoz), SlapMac is designed specifically for MacBooks equipped with the M1 chip or later. The software quietly hides in the system menu bar, and when the sensor detects that the laptop has been slapped, it randomly emits 8 different emotions, over 130 types of “screams.”
The detail settings of SlapMac are quite meticulous: the volume is proportional to the force of the slap (a light tap produces a fizz sound, while a heavy hit results in a scream), and it allows for free adjustment of sensitivity and a “cooldown timer” to prevent sound crashes; the menu bar even records the user’s “total slap count.”
Custom sound packs for more comprehensive functionality
According to the official roadmap, future updates will grant the software higher practicality. The upcoming v1.2 version will introduce “custom sound packs,” allowing users to record their pet’s or boss’s voice as exclusive feedback; v1.3 plans to integrate MCP server support, transforming SlapMac into a system-level event notifier. In the future, whether it’s a new message received in Slack or a code compilation failure (Build failed), the Mac will emit corresponding sounds to alert the user.
$5,000 in three days: Developer says “Don’t overthink it”
Developer Tonino Catapano stated on his personal X page:
“Fun apps are the core of the internet.”
This software, which boasts “cheaper than a burrito and more fun than a therapist,” has also prompted reflection among peers. A well-known developer reposted this product with the comment: “Everyone’s thoughts about apps are too complicated. This software just makes your Mac moan when slapped, and it made $5,000 in three days. Just make it and release it.”
Do you only need a sense of humor to develop software?
In the consumer software market, humor itself is a highly valuable commodity. This product doesn’t solve any pain points and even creates the annoyance of “drawing attention from office colleagues,” but it provides irreplaceable emotional value. Perhaps, future software developers should try to incorporate a bit of pure humor into the rigid code while pursuing technological breakthroughs.
This article about slapping a Mac to produce screams? The application “SlapMac” earned $5,000 in three days first appeared on Chain News ABMedia.