Is there a way, when doing screen recording (for online gameplay, for example), to disable all Notifications, so that it won't interfere with screen recording? Details: It can be done by turning off all Notifications for 35 apps one by one, and when done screen recording, turn on one by one again - but it is too much work doing 70 steps this way. I want to disable any notification at all, including the one that slide down showing 'no preview' content - I want to disable those as well - everything. Set notification preview to never.
Enable DND. Remove apps and disable notifications that don't respect the above settings. For some testing you might be able to disable cellular and then block the APNS servers or all internet or just Apple's servers, but local notifications will still trigger since they are designed to do so. Your best bet for controlling a demo is to control all the apps and settings closely rather than using a fully loaded device with many sources of distraction or interruption. It looks like you need to make sure DND is set to Always: Change Your Settings If you don't want to be disturbed at a certain time, you can set a schedule. Tap Settings Do Not Disturb and turn on Scheduled. Then set a time.
Enter Muzzle, a free app that silences incoming notifications during presentations and screen-sharing. With permission from the Mac user, Muzzle automatically turns on the “Do Not Disturb” setting for you when you’re screen sharing.
You can also choose when you want to receive alerts, calls, and notifications:. Allow Calls From: Allow calls from everyone, no one, your favorites, or specific contact groups stored on your device or iCloud.
![Mute Mute](http://getnotifyr.com/img/apps.png)
Repeated Calls: If someone calls you twice within three minutes, the call won't be silenced. Silence: Choose to silence calls and notifications always or only when the device is locked. @太極者無極而生 Question voting is a lot more loose and I can't fault someone for feeling it's unclear or just a yes/no question. For instance - the update at the top makes it more confusing to me and in the end - you know one answer is turn off each app that you don't want notifications or uninstall those apps. You did do a very good job not making it into a rant - why doesn't apple make this easier. My guess is you'll get + votes now that the title is far less confusing - good edit there.
– Jul 18 '17 at 11:38. I just noticed a new Mac app that states it stops all notification messages.
Is free and according to the developer: Muzzle was born in a group iMessage thread. See, Brian was screensharing with a client when Josh sent him a message about that client, which macOS delightfully showed.to the client. Bad times were had by all.
But Brian and Josh knew a Mac developer. And that Mac developer had a working build of Muzzle in their hands five hours later. I'm not saying this app will solve all your problems, I just saw it and thought I'd pass it on.