the author says in the article it's 15 dollars and since my menu bar has like 4 
editional icons in it it is not  necessary for me to try this but with the 
accessibility of ML and the menu bar  you might want to give this a try if you 
have a lot of icons on your menu bar. You can even rearrange the default extras 
to hide them completely. Link to the article is below.


http://www.macworld.com/article/2013739/mac-gems-bartender-helps-you-take-control-of-menu-bar-icons.html

Mac Gems: Bartender helps you take control of menu-bar icons

Pity the poor menu bar. It seems like just about every app you install these 
days wants to put a little icon up there, often to little real advantage. It’s 
not uncommon for that ever-expanding line of icons on the right to extend under 
the reach of the menus on the left. In short, the menu bar is a mess.


That’s the problem that Bartender is here to solve. Yes, it adds a menu-bar 
item of its own. But within that menu item you can hide other menu-bar icons 
that you don’t want to see all the time. The utility also lets you rearrange 
menu-bar items—OS X lets you rearrange only Apple’s menu extras.

When you open Bartender’s preference window and click the Menu Items icon, you 
see, listed on the left, your menu bar’s current contents. Those apps and 
utilities are divided into three sections: System Items (OS X built-in menu 
extras, such as AirPort and Bluetooth), third-party apps with active menu-bar 
items, and third-party app that have menu-bar items that you’ve disabled within 
those apps themselves. You can add to that list using the usual plus-sign 
button (+), or remove items (-) from it. You can even put the Notification 
Center icon in Bartender’s Bar (or hide the Notifications Center icon 
completely, if you wish—you can still access Notification Center using the 
standard gesture, a two-finger leftward swipe from the right edge of the 
trackpad).


Select any item on the left and you get several options for handling it: You 
can opt to keep it where it is, move it out of the main menu bar and into the 
Bartender Bar, or hide it altogether. You can also choose to have Bartender 
alert you when an app with a menu-bar item has been updated (by showing you the 
icon on the menu bar for a duration you choose).

Once you’ve set all that up, you open the Bartender Bar by clicking on the 
Bartender icon in the main menu bar or pressing a configurable keyboard 
shortcut. (The app offers a nice selection of icons for its menu-bar icon—my 
favorite is one that’s just three dots, reminiscent of the ellipses in OS X 
menus that indicate there’s more to see.) When you do so, the Bartender Bar 
drops down, just below the OS X menu bar, to display the icons for the items 
you chose to put there. Any menu-bar item that you’ve placed on the Bartender 
Bar works just as if it was still on the main menu bar. The Bar autohides when 
you click in another app or press its keyboard shortcut again.

You can position the Bartender Bar wherever you want under the menu bar by 
click-and-holding on the Settings icon, and then dragging. When Bartender is 
active, you can also move any icon on the Bartender Bar or on the OS X menu bar 
by Command-dragging the icon. (Without Bartender, you can perform the same 
Command-drag action with OS X’s own menu extras, but not with third-party menu 
items.)

The Bar’s Settings drop-down also includes Show All Menu Bar Items and Control 
All Menu Bar Items options. The first one does just what it says, while the 
second puts everything back the way you’ve configured them. If you quit 
Bartender, all of your items will reappear on the OS X menu bar—which will 
immediately remind you why you wanted Bartender in the first place.

In addition to the keyboard shortcut to toggle the Bartender Bar’s visibility, 
you can configure keyboard shortcuts to resize the Bar or to show all apps, 
including those you’ve chosen to hide. You can, in fact, opt to hide the 
Bartender icon itself, and summon it only using a hot key.

Bartender isn’t the only menu-bar manager out there. MenuBar Rearranger ($5), 
for example, also lets you hide and rearrange icons, and unlike Bartender, it 
also lets you add flexible spaces and dividing lines between icons. But I don’t 
think its interface is as polished as Bartender’s.

At $15, Bartender might seem expensive for a utility that just cleans up your 
menu bar. But given how crowded that bar can get, and how often I need to use 
it, anything that makes it more usable is worth the money to me, and Bartender 
has earned a permanent place on my menubar. By giving you extensive control 
over the menu bar, Bartender makes a key element of the OS X interface way more 
useful.


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