Versions:

  • 1.9.1
  • 1.9.0
  • 1.8.9
  • 1.8.8
  • 1.8.7
  • 1.8.6
  • 1.8.5
  • 1.8.4
  • 1.8.3
  • 1.8.2
  • 1.8.0
  • 1.7.9
  • 1.7.8
  • 1.7.7
  • 1.7.6
  • 1.7.5
  • 1.7.4
  • 1.7.3
  • 1.7.2
  • 1.7.1
  • 1.7.0
  • 1.6.9
  • 1.6.8
  • 1.6.7
  • 1.6.5
  • 1.6.4
  • 1.6.3
  • 1.5.91
  • 1.5.9
  • 1.5.8
  • 1.5.7
  • 1.5.5
  • 1.5.4
  • 1.5.3
  • 1.5.2
  • 1.5.1
  • 1.5.0
  • 1.4.3
  • 1.4.2
  • 1.4.1
  • 1.3.8
  • 1.3.7
  • 1.3.6
  • 1.3.2
  • 1.3.1
  • 1.3.0
  • 1.2.7
  • 1.2.6
  • 1.2.5
  • 1.2.4
  • 1.2.3

yasb 1.9.1 by AmN is a lightweight, open-source status-bar replacement for Windows that gives power users pixel-perfect control over what appears along the edge of the screen. Designed for users who prefer tiling window managers or minimal desktop environments, the program exposes every element—clock, CPU load, memory usage, network activity, battery state, active window title, workspace indicator, weather, media playback, system tray, and more—as a YAML-defined widget that can be repositioned, recolored, re-skinned, or hidden with a few lines of configuration. Because the bar is rendered with Qt and updated through a plug-in architecture, it consumes only a few megabytes of RAM and negligible CPU while remaining live-updating and interactive; clicks, scrolls, and hover events can be bound to arbitrary commands, letting users mute audio, switch virtual desktops, or launch applications directly from the panel. Typical deployments see yasb integrated into standalone shells such as Komorebi, bug.n, or PowerToys FancyZones, where it replaces the native Windows taskbar entirely, but it can also run atop Explorer for users who merely want a slimmer, more informative header or footer. Fifty-one successive releases since the project’s debut have progressively added WinRT-powered media controls, WMI-based hardware sensors, Unicode icon fonts, DPI-aware scaling, and a built-in CSS-like styling engine, culminating in the current 1.9.1 build that ships with twenty ready-made themes and an online widget gallery. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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