

At $24.95, it's certainly a bargain and definitely a nice compliment to MW. Really? How? MasterWriter has a number of features that don't exist in Rhyme Genie.
#MASTERWRITER COM INSTALL#
It comes with TuneSmith which you can install on as many computers as you wish and pretty much blows MasterWriter out of the water. I can only recommend MasterWriter's main competitor Rhyme Genie. The cloud is a nice place for my calendar and address book contacts.

I want to know I can install it on my computer and it damn well works. It's a little rough around the edges, but I've come up with workarounds, all because there's no visceral satisfaction about "renting" your app. especially as you pointed out when I might use it infrequently and don't want to be on this sort of subscription model.įinally it drove me to something cheaper but that does the trick for my modest needs: Swift Publisher 3. Anyway, I go to Adobe's website and I see all this stuff about signing up for a monthly plan to use the software and I was confused and frankly, annoyed. I was a big Pagemaker fan back in the day.

I can't remember now the name of what it is. I wanted to find some sort of desktop publishing app and ended up thinking I'd see what Adobe had these days. I have Adobe Photoshop Elements which is fine for my needs.
#MASTERWRITER COM UPDATE#
Thanks for the heads-up I will avoid this product update (I keep getting email reminders about it). When I'm running a session, I try to be as off-line as possible, and when doing a remote session, it's a given. Multiply by hundreds of apps and plug-ins and you'd have to be a millionaire.īut of course the bigger issue is the trend towards having to be on-line to use an app. I have participated in two of their surveys where I pointed out various reasons - including the one in the original post - why the cloud (as they now call this ancient technology and approach) is not a good solution for a number of contexts and users.Įach of these companies acts like their product is the center of everyone's universe, when in fact most of us (on this forum at least) have many dedicated apps that we need either in off-line use or irregularly and cannot afford to pay for monthly or annually. Mhschmieder wrote:Adobe is taking the same approach.
