Really just curious what folks out there deem valuable enough to give money for monthly or annually. As a software engineer I have quite a few that keep me productive and I’ll list a few:

  • ChatGPT
  • Perplexity
  • Obsidian Sync
  • YouTube Premium
  • @Plopp
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    59 months ago

    Just a VPN. Thinking about trying out Proton’s suite and maybe pay for that if it’s worth it. Otherwise I’m more and more leaning on OSS and self hosted things these days because corporations have shown themselves not to be trusted with anything important.

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      From what I’ve heard self hosting your email though can be a big PITA so paying someone for email is not a terrible choice. Self hosting you need to carefully manage the system and reputation to make sure your email that you send actually gets delivered, and doesn’t arrive in spam.

      • @Plopp
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        19 months ago

        Self hosting email has been a hard no for way over a decade at this point, maybe two. It’s a terrible idea.

    • Dojan
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      19 months ago

      I recently swapped over from Dashlane to Proton, and I don’t regret it at all. Plus I can decouple my stuff from Google, and use my own domain for my personal email, which I can then give out to individuals and hide behind aliases for companies/services. I rather like it. The VPN seems solid enough too, though I’ve nary a use for such things.

      • @Plopp
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        29 months ago

        Yeah there are many great things about Proton. It’s just so damn expensive. Had it been like $7 per month (charged monthly) I’d already been a customer. I’m guessing the VPN carries the highest cost for Proton, so it’d be nice to have the option for the whole suite except the VPN.

        • Dojan
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          9 months ago

          Yeah. I don’t really feel like VPNs are that necessary, though I also sort of get having it as a product. For me it wasn’t really that tough a choice; I already paid $5 monthly for Dashlane, Proton Pass was a bit of an upgrade in terms of features (though they don’t seem to check haveibeenpwned like Dashlane), and it came with a bunch of other services I really could use.

          All that said, I believe they have a free-tier for all of their services, so you could always dip your toes in, see how you feel about it, and decide later if you think it’s worth it or not?

          As a complete aside, your username has me convinced to buy some plopp. It is Saturday after all.

          • @Plopp
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            19 months ago

            Oh I use a VPN 24/7 and wouldn’t have it any other way (even though I also don’t think it’s strictly necessary), but I already have a provider that I trust, is fast and cost only like <$3/month I think.

            I’m thinking of trying Proton Pass for free which I think you can do, but the main attraction is to get away from the Google suite and incorporate a more privacy focused one. Having a calendar, generating unlimited email aliases to store in the password manager etc.

            Go have some lördagsplopp!

            • Dojan
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              39 months ago

              Yeah, I don’t think Proton would be my go-to choice for VPN when it comes to privacy. I’ve heard stuff about them actually keeping logs. In that case I’d be more interested in Mullvad since they just run their service on RAM. I did give the Proton VPN a spin, and at least as far as speeds go, it’s pretty fast. They give you a notice if you use the “Secure Core” feature, stating that the connection speed might end up being a bit slow, but it still seems to reach the cap of my wifi (500mbit) so it honestly isn’t that bad. So for streaming region locked stuff it seems to do the job. “Secure Core” as far as I can tell, just tunnels your connection through several nodes, I’m not well versed enough on networking to know how that could possibly improve security, because to me it sounds like adding more points of failure.

              I do really like the email service and the password manager, and I’m sure I’ll get some use from the drive as well at some point. When signing up for things, the password manager automatically suggests masking your email. Would’ve killed for something like that ten years ago; my gmail account is flooded with useless BS that it’s nice to finally move away from it.