Is there an alternative to constantly adding endless features? Can software be designed to operate without daily updates, similar to programming languages?
“daily” in “daily updates” is hyperbole, but you can probably get most of the way there with
a subscription-based model (annual and/or monthly)
periodic updates to ensure it works properly when the underlying platform changes (like when Apple adds dark mode to its OS and exposes this to websites with prefers-color-scheme).
The second bullet point is important, at least occasionally. I dropped my beloved VoodooPad because it never got a publicly-released version that supports dark mode that works on macOS, iOS, and iPadOS. I figure VoodooPad is nearly dead because its current owners can’t figure out how to turn it into something that gets enough revenue to justify the time that it would take to make it a modern app.
At any rate, the notes I had in VoodooPad got moved into Ulysses some time after the Ulysses team added projects back in 2022. Ulysses is not a good personal wiki (internal linking isn’t nearly as low-friction as in Obsidian), but it’s adequate for my purposes and I dislike having a gazillion different personal-wiki software packages that I need to divvy my attention between.
As far as update cadence goes…
If you look at Ulysses’ Releases page and make note of the dates in the headings, you can see that they’ve been steadily, but not all that quickly, been releasing features. There’s probably at least one programming language out there with this release cadence, but I wouldn’t know which one it is.
“daily” in “daily updates” is hyperbole, but you can probably get most of the way there with
a subscription-based model (annual and/or monthly)
periodic updates to ensure it works properly when the underlying platform changes (like when Apple adds dark mode to its OS and exposes this to websites with
prefers-color-scheme
).The second bullet point is important, at least occasionally. I dropped my beloved VoodooPad because it never got a publicly-released version that supports dark mode that works on macOS, iOS, and iPadOS. I figure VoodooPad is nearly dead because its current owners can’t figure out how to turn it into something that gets enough revenue to justify the time that it would take to make it a modern app.
At any rate, the notes I had in VoodooPad got moved into Ulysses some time after the Ulysses team added projects back in 2022. Ulysses is not a good personal wiki (internal linking isn’t nearly as low-friction as in Obsidian), but it’s adequate for my purposes and I dislike having a gazillion different personal-wiki software packages that I need to divvy my attention between.
As far as update cadence goes…
If you look at Ulysses’ Releases page and make note of the dates in the headings, you can see that they’ve been steadily, but not all that quickly, been releasing features. There’s probably at least one programming language out there with this release cadence, but I wouldn’t know which one it is.