About
A native home for the web apps you live in
LiquidPad is a macOS menu-bar app that slides a Liquid-Glass panel of your web apps and built-in native tools in from the screen edge on a global keyboard shortcut. It's built on Apple's own AppKit and WebKit (not Electron, not Chromium), so it stays light on RAM and battery.
Why it exists
Most people run their work life across a dozen browser tabs and a handful of heavy Electron apps. Each one is a full Chromium copy eating RAM and battery. LiquidPad collapses that into one fast, glanceable panel that’s a keystroke away and never steals focus. And because it’s native, it can do things a browser tab can’t: per-app isolated login sessions for running multiple accounts of the same service, a built-in terminal and SSH manager, a command palette, boards, Picture-in-Picture for anything, and more.
Native, not Electron
The whole point is restraint. LiquidPad uses WKWebView, the same WebKit engine Safari uses, wrapped in AppKit. There’s no bundled browser engine per app, no telemetry, and no background Chromium fleet. Open apps stay warm like browser tabs; idle ones throttle. It’s built for fifty apps open without lag, on a Mac, the Mac way.
Who builds it
LiquidPad is made by Agentik OS, a small independent studio. It’s a focused, opinionated product shipped continuously. See the changelog for the near-daily pace of updates. There is no investor pressure to harvest your data; the app is funded by a simple subscription and the occasional tip.
Get in touch
Questions, ideas, or feedback? See the contact page, suggest and upvote features on the wishlist, or just download LiquidPad and try it. The free tier needs no card.