If you stop by here often, you already know the Mac app flat rate "Setapp". The affordable full version offer is now also available for iPhone and iPad. With this you can secure the full versions of various useful apps for a small monthly subscription price and use them on your mobile Apple devices. I have summarized how this works for you in this post.
The Setapp app subscription is not only available for the Apple Mac, but now also for the iPhone and iPad. The additional subscription brings you full versions via QR code.
A Setapp-Subscription for Mac starts at $8,99 per month for individuals and businesses. The subscription for iPhone and iPad can also be taken out for an additional $4,99 per month. To begin with, the selection of available iOS and iPadOS apps (see below) is still quite small. But that was also the case when the full version subscription for macOS was introduced. You can now obtain over 190 programs for the Apple Mac without restrictions. The additional costs for iOS devices will certainly be worth it in the future.
iOS and iPadPS apps at Setapp
As noted above, the current app selection is still a bit small. These programs are currently available from Setapp for the iPhone and iPad (as of August 13.08.2020, XNUMX):
Gemini
paste
SQLPro Studio
2Do
PDF search
Ulysses
task heat
MindNode
The selection of Setapp apps for iOS on the iPhone and iPadOS on the iPad is still quite small, but it will certainly grow quickly.
Unfortunately, it is not as easy to use Setapp on Apple mobile devices as it is on the Apple Mac. You have to scan two QR codes to install apps and upgrade them to the full version for free. So you need a Mac, an iMac or a MacBook with the macOS version of Setapp to use the whole thing. Searches for iOS programs in the Setapp app there, scans the first QR code for installation and then the second to activate all features. The procedure is also clearly explained again in one Video of the provider.
Jens has been running the blog since 2012. He appears as Sir Apfelot for his readers and helps them with problems of a technical nature. In his free time he drives electric unicycles, takes photos (preferably with his iPhone, of course), climbs around in the Hessian mountains or hikes with the family. His articles deal with Apple products, news from the world of drones or solutions for current bugs.
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