![]() I buy every version of most of my currently installed software. 2 A Few Words About Money, Charity, and Support They can call it what they want and I can call it what I want. It’s pedantic and probably wrong but it’s how my mind keeps track of value. When I rent, I get an access and usage permission but I get nothing to keep. I think of a subscription as a recurring fee for ownership. They call it a subscription model but I’m going to call it app renting. Smile has a new business model for TextExpander 6. The TE keyboard on iOS was the only one I trusted to give “full access.” Even though the iOS keyboard always felt slow and outdated I still loved the app for its syncing and integration across all the apps I used. Each year, the iOS version felt more neglected but the integration with other apps was incredible. Even when the more powerful Keyboard Maestro added typed-text triggers, I stuck by TE because I liked how it worked. ![]() I’ve been an ardent fan of TextExpander (TE) for as long as I can remember. Michael Tsai has a tremendous round up of opinions.Įveryone has an opinion. This post at Practically Effecient considers why we pay for software at all. Drang’s post and the latest Back to Work episode for additional opinions from similarly invested nerds. But I’ve recommended the Mac and iOS app TextExpander many, many times and feel like I’ve endorsed it enough that I now have an obligation to all the people that listened to me, even if I don’t want it. While I may be cranky, I’m not all that self-important. I dislike wading into battles of opinion.
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