What is the most useless app that you have seen being given as a subscription?

For me, I tried a ‘minimalist’ launcher app for Android that had a 7 day trial or something and they had a yearly subscription based model for it. I was aghast. I would literally expect the app to blow my mind and do everything one can assume to go that way. In a world, where Nova Launcher (Yes, I know it has been acquired by Branch folks but it still is a sturdy one) or Niagara exist plus many alternatives including minimalist ones on F Droid, the dev must be releasing revolutionary stuff to factor in a subscription service.

Second, is a controversial choice, since it’s free tier is quite good and people like it so much. But, Pocketcasts. I checked it’s yearly price the other day, and boy, in my country, I can subscribe to Google Play Pass, YouTube Premium and Spotify and still have money left before I hit the ceiling what Pocketcasts is asking for paid upgrade.

Also, what are your views on one time purchase vs subscriptions? Personally, I find it much easier to purchase, if it’s good enough even if it was piratable, something if it is a one time purchase rather than repetitive.

  • Kilgore Trout
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    11 months ago

    Most users can’t name a single reason why their programs should update.

    They don’t see risks in running unmaintained software. The developer does. I could get behind your all-subscriptions ideal, but if the user terminates the subscripition, he should be made unable to keep using the software. Hence why this cannot be the norm with Free software.

    • buskbrand@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      If the app doesn’t have network access, though, the OS sandbox should be more than sufficient to keep it secure.

      A calculator app should be safe to run without updates at least until the OS APIs undergo a breaking changes (which should take several years at least).

    • jet@hackertalks.com
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      11 months ago

      As long as somebody is maintaining the software, it really doesn’t matter if it’s the original developers. If somebody takes the code and rebuilds the software, they are de facto responsible / maintaining it.

      Software such as signal, and Molly, mostly because they talk to a central server have minimum version requirements. So if you go too far without updating you can no longer participate.

      I think from the internet health perspective, a nag pop up when a software hasn’t been updated in it’s a 6 months, saying this software is out of date and proposes a security risk, should be sufficient. This could be done by the app store, the operating system, or even the app itself