Of course, it also needs to be a Mac App. I also must feel I would miss them if they suddenly went away. Once again, I’m here to blog about my favourite Mac Apps for the year.įor my purposes, to be considered an App of the Year, the software needs to be something I used extensively, value and enjoy. So there we have it, my subscriptions as they stand in late 2023. I have been onboard since launch and am grandfathered into a slightly cheaper plan.Īn Australian TV service that gives me access to enough ESPN to watch Australian NBL basketball. I’ve gone back and forth on Setapp, but have always kept it around. I honestly don’t know if I even need it now, but am worried that I will cancel, discover I do need it, and then not have access to the discounted rate anymore. I got a cheap subscription to the Family plan through my previous employer. It’s basically a photo backup and not much else. I went through the cancellation flow last year, which netted me a big annual discount and kept me onboard. Yet it’s still the only show in town for keeping me on the financial straight and narrow, so it’s not going anywhere. It’s pricing is stupid, a bunch of their features don’t work in the Australian banking sector, and I’ve outgrown all their training. My subscription still has about 4 months left, so we will see how I feel then. I have been this close to leaving Fastmail in favour of iCloud, but I don’t think I have the motivation. I would be willing to move away from this, but I’m part of a family group and I don’t love the idea of having to deal with transferring other people. They really took a lot of heat moving to subscription before most other providers did the same. I went away from TE for a while, but a friend works there, and I still enjoy the affordances it provides. It’s excellent.ĪnyList helps me with my shopping, but also with my recipe management. I’ve even used their book printing service. I have been journalling in Day One for about a decade, and I enjoy having a private, safe place to put my thoughts. Key ones for me include canion.blog, and You can’t be on the internet and not have a few domains. It helps me profile things I like on canion.blog.Īlso by Vincent, this service is a nice simple way to get a sense of which pages on my website are interesting to people. Adam is also a friend.Īnother indie service hosted by a friend, Vincent. My second home on Internet, which hosts my profile landing page, but is also my Mastodon instance. It hosts my blog, it hosted my first podcast, and I love it. The price fluctuates because of the currency conversion. When we want it, I turn it back on again. I tend to subscribe for a month, then turn off automatic renewal. This one comes as goes based on the interest of my kids and I. Now I’m only playing Wordle and Connections, so this will go when the cheap option expires. I subscribed on a sweet deal to play the Crosswords. I rarely watch YouTube, but my kids love it, and I don’t want constant ads being driven into their brain. I use enough Apple Services that the full deal is worth it. I now only have Apple TV+ and Fetch (for ESPN) during the Australian NBL basketball season. I’ve gotten rid of them all recently, as my budget has changed, and their value quotient declined. What might be most noticeable is the paucity of streaming services. I will have to fix that!Įven with YNAB, some of the cost estimates are fuzzy because of currency exchange fluctuations. In writing this, I’m discovering that there are a few subscriptions without a YNAB category. I have a subscriptions grouping in YNAB so I’m referencing that to assist here. A few people are blogging about their current subscription software.
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