
And I would guess that a lot of one person shops or prosumers are doing the same as me. We’re being nickeled and dimed to distraction, especially with Covid, so I’m going as minimal as possible -and it does make life much simpler in a number of ways, despite some necessary workarounds.
#BUSYCONTACTS REORDER PLUS#
Most newspapers are jammed with ads plus subscription price. Not all subscriptions are reasonable - I’ve noticed several that charge $40 - $80 per year for basically a one-trick pony minor utility - don’t recall which right now.

(However, Affinity Photo, Designer and Publisher are great deals that can be purchased for around $120 when on special - no subscription - and although not yet as powerful as Quark or InDesign or the Adobe suite, they are already starting to challenge in certain segments.) I’ve stopped upgrading Quark Xpress at 2019 as they have gone wacko again with their latest revolving door management.
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I keep one Mac at High Sierra so I can continue to use Adobe CS6, having refused Adobe’s subscriptions. Given the situation, SetApp might be a good way to go but they only have a few apps I use, but I wish them well. What a mess to contact all the places that had subscriptions tied to the old card. You can assign multiple tags to each contact and a tag. A couple of years ago, my credit card was replaced because of a fraudster. Tags Tags are a flexible way to categorize and filter contacts in Bus圜ontacts. Not all subscriptions are through the App Store.

Doesn’t give you a lot of confidence there for anything costly, if problems occur. I bought one app subscription from the App Store that ended up not working on my Mac but Apple refused to refund the subscription and the developer said he couldn’t do anything about it. In general, yes, I am opposed to subscriptions. So, are you opposed to all subscriptions? After all so much of our freedoms and knowledge are built on things that require or strongly encourage subscriptions, like newspapers (NY Times, Washington Post, your local or regional paper), magazines (MacUser, Macworld, Macazine) and websites (e.g. If they don’t have anything due soon, I’ll figure out a way to send them something, even if I don’t get anything in return other than they stay in business, able to continue developing their products.

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The benefit to a subscription is that your cost to get on board is usually reasonable, in some cases you can keep the subscription for just the time that you need the software and, sometimes, it actually might be cheaper over the long run (though that isn’t usually the case, unfortunately).įor those apps which I use that aren’t subscription-based, I’ll often reach out to a developer if it’s been a while since I last paid them something (like 18 months-2 years) to see if they have a major new release upcoming. Subscriptions gives them a reasonably steady stream to do that. As more and more developers turn to subscriptions, I remove more and more apps down to the minimum ones needed, unlike a number of years ago.Ī few years ago, I thought that subscriptions were the spawn of the devil.ĭevelopers, both big and small, need income on a steady basis in order to do basic things like pay the rent on the office or apartment or the mortgage, pay themselves a living wage, etc.
