Ask HN: What software do you actually pay for?
Hey HN.
I'm curious what apps / software you pay for.
This community is interesting and we all use a bunch of Open Source and free software but I'm curious to see what apps you actually pay for.
I'm curious what apps / software you pay for.
This community is interesting and we all use a bunch of Open Source and free software but I'm curious to see what apps you actually pay for.
46 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 86.4 ms ] threadhttps://getpolarized.io/
It's basically a PDF and document management repository. It's kind of like Mendeley/Zotero meets Kindle+Github.
I'm kicking around some ideas including just make it flat out free and just focusing on growth to charging for some premium features like cloud sync.
One of the things we're struggling with is many of our users are from the HN community and they aren't really open to using something like cloud sync as they don't trust cloud.
I pay for software when it has value to me, and your product does have value to me. I haven't used it much yet (see below), but I really like what it can offer.
I have paid for:
iOS: GoodReader, Working Copy, OmniFocus, Anki, and Scrivener (these are also among my more frequently used apps). I've paid for some games over the years but mostly board game ports to iPad (because carrying around boxes of games is a PITA). The rest of the apps on my iPhone (iPad isn't handy) are communication apps, media consumption apps (that I may pay a subscription for), or apps for a specific business (like a bank or airline). My iPad will be similar except it'll have the games.
macOS: I've paid for HeroLab, Scrivener, OmniFocus, YNAB4 (of the apps still on my laptop). I have also, in the past, paid for Parallels and some other things but they're not installed and I haven't missed them. I have also bought video games, but none presently installed. The rest of what I use is generally open source. I have Anki and would pay for it if the author sold it.
I would get more value from Polar Bookshelf if you had an iOS offering as that is where I do the bulk of my PDF reading (or Android, I do have a Kindle Fire I use for reading though less frequently). If it were available there, I'd happily pay for it. But I don't need cloud sync. I have sufficient cloud storage already and plenty of room to host the files I'd add to Polar (actually, most of what I'd add I actually have but haven't read in my Dropbox account already).
- Jetbrains All Pack
- LittleSnitch
- Git Tower
- iStats
- VMWare Fusion
- Beyond Compare
- Office 365
IntelliJ... love it. Can't live without it.
Slack... of course.
Github.
Lots of web apps like Typeform.
Github - I used to pay, but not anymore. Since, private repos are free now.
Slack.
Maybe I’m just drawing a blank. I’d be curious to know if anyone pays for command line tools.
I do believe it's closed-minded to think all alternatives to commercial software are exactly the same as the commercial version and therefore there's no reason to buy commercial. Paid software still has a reason to exist and many customers to bat.
Office
JetBrains IDEs
AWS and Azure (most of the price covers hardware, but some of it certainly goes to the software on top)
G Suite
Slack
Atlassian products
Actual Multiple Monitors
Sync.com
Now I can easily send files, notifications, etc from phone to laptop and vice versa. Plus it has an advantage that I get google drive backup of everything done everyday!
The backup feature does sound nice. I back my messages up to google drive, though.
- Sublime Merge
- Alfred
- Daisy Disk
- Github
- Office
- AWS
Paid for sublime text around 3-4 years ago, used it for 1-2 solid years, now a days am on VIM + TMUX but don't regret having paid.
Paid for PyCharm, used less than 1 month, regretted paying for.
And that's about it.
Most recently, I paid for the Mac version of Soulver (https://www.acqualia.com/soulver/) because I got the iOS version for free and I really liked it. I regularly purchase apps on my phone if they solve my problems and are high quality.
At work we use loads of SaaSy things: Azure, Pingdom, BrowserStack, Segment, Office 365, AWS, Zendesk, JIRA, etc. etc.
Omnifocus
Keyboard Maestro
Quiver
Quickbooks
There was also Photodex's ProShow Gold[1] - imho, the photoshop of photo2video software. Powerful yet so easy to use (after a day of testing). I bought it because I found that this type of creative work helps me relax, etc... Lots of similar software (I about tried them all over the years) but nothing came close. Worth every penny. Not WINE-friendly (I found after transitioning):-(
Company issued but honorable mention: Azure RP[2] for prototyping, wireframing and planning. This was years ago but I never worked with a piece of software that was able to communicate so much, so quickly to everyone involved in a project. Very powerful at the time. Many competitors in this space today. fyi: Have not touch it in many years - it may be completely different now...
These three really stand out, though I have purchased some others over the years. All three are part of the creative process and produce something at the end (script, video, a prototype) - all of which I find engages me.
In the end (personally) it's about how much software will enrich you. There's also a limit on how much I'm willing to spend (usually under $100).
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4DOS
[1] https://www.photodex.com/proshow/gold
[2] https://www.axure.com/
- IDE (IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate) [Yearly Subscription] - HyperVisor (Parallels, VMWare Fusion+Vagrant VMWare plugin) [Yearly Subscription; Per-Version purchase respectively]
However I still use a couple of apps that I paid for once and continue to use:
- Time tracking/Invoicing (Billings Pro, soon to be replaced as they don't support their self-host server any more) - Diff (Kaleidoscope) - Diagrams/Wireframes (OmniGraffle - haven't actually upgraded to a version that supports Mojave yet though) - 'Office' suite (Pages/Numbers)
Sublime Text (But I changed to use Visual Code last year)
MacOS
IntelliJ
Oxford Dictionary (English to Chinese, mobile app)
Daijirin (Japanese dictionary, mobile app)
Joyent for cloud VMs
Desktop subscription based: Devexpress Winforms and ASP.net component suite (best Windows component suite on the market - leaves free alternatives in the dust). Add in Express components for building office add-ins (could not build my core product without it)
Both of these combined cost me about €1,000 a year. Well worth it too as they make my software far superior to all the competition that use free components.
SaaS: Hotjar for website heatmaps and session cams (HUGELY VALUABLE!). Linkedin Premium for help contacting potential partners (HUGELY VALUABLE!). Feedbin, RSS reader. Mailchimp
[All of my own products are desktop apps that consumers pay $60-$150 for. Sales are up.]
Question (for the Mac people here): what's the Mac equivalent of that?
- I pay for an account at sr.ht
- I host my site and other things via prgmr