![]() 2 services for free, $13/month or $99/year for unlimited. Wavebox - Looks like a very promising option.Also, it "requires" permission to read and change all your data on the websites you visit and your browser history. Looks fine, but I prefer having all this stuff in a separate app instead of trying to fit everything into the side of my web browser. Switch Workstation - A free Chrome extension.Unfortunately, they decided to make auto-refresh a premium feature. Looks like one of the most polished options, if their website is anything to go by. Stack Browser - Basic free version supports unlimited "cards" and "stacks" but only 3 "spaces," while the unlimited version is $8.4/monthly or $84/yearly.I don't like the lack of an unlimited option for individuals, but it looks polished and I doubt most people will use more than 25 anyway. Basaas - The basic free version supports up to 3 services, then it's $6.50/month for 10 services, $9.50/month for 25 services, or "talk to us about an enterprise account" for unlimited.Sidekick - The basic free version supports up to 5 services (10 total, but only 5 in the sidebar), or $12/month ($8/month if you pay for a whole year) for unlimited.I wish it was FOSS, but overall, I think it takes the cake. In any event, it works very well, and I get the sense that I won't have to worry about having to suddenly set up all my services in another app for the third time. I've seen a few that allowed the former, but the latter is particularly rare. It looks and feels very polished to me, and even gives an option to set it as the default email app and as the default calendar app on my computer. Singlebox - Basic free app supports 2 services, $25 lifetime license for unlimited.You could use it for messasing/communication apps, but the people who make it also make another app that's specifically designed for that and also less expensive. I actually already use it for Pimsleur and Whimsical, but not messaging/communication apps. This is designed to turn websites into apps. WebCatalog - Basic free app supports 10 services (up to 2 apps per "space"), $40 lifetime license for unlimited services in any number of spaces.Didn't pass my "smell test." If I'm going to trust an app with something as sensitive as my email login credentials, then I want to know exactly how they make their money, or I want it to be completely open source. Biscuit - Only free, but completely proprietary and looks a little unpolished.Shift - Basic free account supports up to two services, $99/year for more.Looks like the old developer was trying to encourage people to do this, so it wouldn't be a battle.) (Honestly? If anyone is seriously thinking "Darn it, I'm going to fork Franz myself so that there can be a good FOSS product in this space!" then consider forking from Station. You can still download it if that doesn't disqualify it for you. Station - Their website and app screenshots look great… which is a shame because the project was discontinued.I had issues with it being able to log into Google services, forgetting all of my account data, not opening links… hence why I switched to Ferdi eventually. Unfortunately, it's maintained by just one person who seems a bit overwhelmed. I actually used this for a good while before coming to Ferdi. Hamsket - Originally forked from an older version of Rambox, back when Rambox switched to a "freemium" model.Also, the app itself doesn't look or feel as polished as their website, imo. spellchecker, customizable workspaces), $144 for lifetime license. Rambox - Basic free account supports unlimited services, $5/month to unlock features (e.g. ![]() ![]() This is what Ferdi was originally forked from.
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