LiquidText 5.10.28: What’s New?
Woke up to an update from LiquidText for comments; auto-positioning them to the margins of our documents, and I found the perfect culprit.
Woke up to an update from LiquidText for comments; auto-positioning them to the margins of our documents, and I found the perfect culprit.
These updates open new possibilities that we are excited about, and we’ll be putting LiquidText to the test. Is it more stable now?
Those are the latest updates from LiquidText. They are all very exciting, and they make the app an even more powerful research tool. We look forward to seeing more updates! LiquidText has improved dramatically since it went subscription, which is good to see.
LiquidText Pro remains a one-time purchase for your iPad, at $29.99. However, if you want to sync across all your devices, you must commit to a monthly subscription.
We love the fact that the app doesn’t lag or crash anymore. We pray this is actually a permanent bug fix. This would mean the app is usable and we can request more features from our developers.
LiquidText is a formidable research tool for the iPad that keeps improving every year. The syncing issues we had before seem to have been finally resolved, and we’re happy to see that.
Though we’ve seen a lot of improvements in LiquidText, they haven’t been cheap. We also still hear a lot of crashing reports and failed syncing, which makes it very difficult for us to justify subscribing to the app if you’re an individual.
During a typical study session, I have Safari opened on the left quarter of my iPad screen and LiquidText on the right. I like studying with Safari open to check spellings and definitions, look up images, etc.
I thought to have a conversation with you guys, to give you a sneak peek into my life at Paperless X. I’ll try to cover the most popular apps on this channel to show you what a biased app review looks like for Paperless X