Education templates by nobody 2 1 1. Flexibits makes Fantastical, the powerful (yet friendly!) calendar and reminders app for Mac, iPhone, and iPad. Learn to love your calendar again. Sep 28, 2020 Flexibits has issued Fantastical 3.2, adding options to search only title, location, or attendees.The calendar app now displays recurring events more prominently when viewing hidden items, improves the display of short back-to-back events so they are less likely to overlap in Day and Week views, fixes a bug that caused Google sync to get stuck in some situations, resolves an issue where sync.
Speaking of the App Store and the market for pro utility software, here, once again, is Dieter Bohn:
It’s not every day we get to talk about a good old-fashionedutility app update. I wouldn’t go so far as to say they’re a dyingbreed, but the Apple App Store platform dynamics of recent yearshave made their row much harder to hoe.
Flexibits makes Fantastical, the powerful (yet friendly!) calendar and reminders app for Mac, iPhone, and iPad. Learn to love your calendar again.
Which is one reason I’m happy to say that if you’re a Mac oriPhone user (or, ideally, both), you should absolutely go checkout the newly updated Fantastical apps. There are a few newfeatures and parity across platforms — I personally am excitedfor a calendar app that integrates with several to-do apps.
The thing about this update that may grab some attention is thatit is moving to a subscription model. Historically, this kind ofmove has sparked consternation, but I’m not feeling any of that.It’s $4.99 a month or — in my preferred way to talk aboutsubscription pricing — $40 per year (a $20 discount). Thatsubscription gets you access to the iPhone, Mac, iPad, and AppleWatch apps. Non-Apple users should look elsewhere.
I think the subscription model is totally fair, especially givenFlexibits’ history of updates and quality. That’s partiallybecause, as I alluded to up top, there really aren’t betteroptions for this category of apps given the rules laid down byApple in the App Store.
Consternation indeed. Lots of complaining on Twitter, and Fantastical 3’s App Store reviews have been dragged down by angry users complaining about the pricing change. For users who only used Fantastical on iPhone, I can see the complaint about pricing — it went from a one-time purchase of $4-5 to a $40 annual subscription. That’s a big jump. But — and this is a huge “but” — Flexibits (Fantastical’s developer) went out of its way to let anyone who owned Fantastical 2 keep the features they already had access to when upgrading to Fantastical 3. If you owned Fantastical 2 you can use Fantastical 3 free of charge and keep the features you already had.
And if, like me, you used Fantastical across iPhone, iPad, and Mac (they previously sold the iPad app as a separate version from iPhone), $40 a year is quite reasonable. Fantastical is a professional calendaring (and now task management) app, and as Bohn points out, subscriptions are the best way for a developer like Flexibits to succeed in the App Store.
Fantastical 3.1
![Fantastical calendar for windows 10 Fantastical calendar for windows 10](https://www.suchtv.pk/media/k2/items/cache/4c960e2a13b09b8651c8de96ff0aa005_XL.jpg)
Fantastical 3 Tutorial
★ Tuesday, 4 February 2020