Comment by yathaid
9 hours ago
> Obsidian charges $8 a month to access the same notes across multiple devices. While not a huge amount for such a useful app, it adds up to an eye-watering amount - almost $1,000 if I planned to use Obsidian for a decade.
This highlights one of my personal bugbears. People have a mental barrier when it comes to recurring, low-cost payments; even though the net sum is small in comparison to other things that they wouldn't think twice to pay for.
A $5 latte every workday comes to (260 * 5) $1300 annually. Obsidian sync is $96. Why would you not pay this amount for a tool you use everyday?
> People have a mental barrier when it comes to recurring, low-cost payments;
It's because they add up. In this specific case, considering OP job and it's heavy use of obsidian, it makes no sense to not pay for the synchro, if only to support the company[1], but if I was paying 8€/month for all software and service I'm using I would be bankrupted immediately.
Ironically this hurt open source and companies proposing generous free tiers the most because the amount of money people have for software will go to the one they cannot get for free.
[1] actually it makes no sense to develop your own tool when alternatives already exists
Also it is competing with a free editor and USB stick that has been around since 2000. That's the anchor.
Then now you have Google docs, Dropbox, O365, Notion, Confluence, etc.
I mean, by this definition it's competing with a small paper noteblock and a graphite pencil. Lose the USB and everything is gone, forgo all features of Obsidian, etc.
> A $5 latte every workday comes to (260 * 5) $1300 annually.
I spend ~€10 on food per day. Paying $5 for a coffee _every day_ sounds like a lavish luxury. Fun fact: global median income is only ~$2500.
> Obsidian sync is $96. Why would you not pay this amount for a tool you use everyday?
If I paid $96 for my notes to sync, I'd still need to set up some synchronisation mechanism for other files (e.g.: photos, documents, music, etc).
I.e.: I would still need something like Syncthing. If I'm going through the effort of setting up Syncthing, including notes notes for it is trivial.
Also Obsidian asks for permissions to read files in all of the device on Android. They don't explain clearly why that is necessary.
I don't see it being discussed that widely.
Also another aspect is that many people seems to think Obsidian is open source, while it is not so.
Not anymore. As of Obsidian 1.8.10 you can use app storage which doesn't require additional permissions. It's explained here:
https://help.obsidian.md/android
Still they are recommending people to use device storage permissions with "All files" permissions rather than the limited App Storage permissions.
They prefer that the users use the less secure option.
2 replies →
> Also Obsidian asks for permissions to read files in all of the device on Android.
Oh interesting where did you find that?