Raycast opened Glaze to everyone, letting Mac users describe a workflow and generate a local desktop app that can work with files, shortcuts, menus, APIs, and team sharing. Glaze is a practical Loot pick for Mac-first teams that keep building tiny internal tools, menu-bar helpers, or one-off workflow apps in web stacks they do not really need. The useful angle is local desktop integration. Raycast says Glaze apps live on the Mac, launch like normal apps, can work offline, and can reach OS features such as files, keyboard shortcuts, menu bar integration, background processes, APIs, and hardware. That makes it more interesting for personal utilities than another hosted browser app. Start with narrow use cases: a file renamer, a support-review helper, a team dashboard, a menu-bar tracker, or a small automation wrapper around an internal API. Avoid treating it as a replacement for audited production software until you have reviewed the generated app, data paths, permissions, sharing model, and pricing. Caveats: Glaze currently targets macOS Tahoe on Apple Silicon, and Windows/Linux are only listed as planned. Team sharing and public-store publishing also introduce governance questions, so teams should define what can be built, shared, and connected before rolling it out broadly.