

If that’s true, I’d hope that’d mean Apple was going to bundle it sometime soon. I’m not sure of the “rumor status” of this, but someone told me that a request from Apple with financial backing was actually one of the main reasons MindJet “ported” MindManager to OS X. 93!)Īnd if MindManager could get itself bundled in OS X…well, that’d be a whole ‘nuter story, partner. I hate that silly “.95/.99” pricing: you could at least do something quirky and make it. (Also: come on, just take the extra nickel from my pocket and round those numbers up. I actually purchased a copy of the previous version of OmniGraffle for the JAAS book and it was worth it. Obviously, I think $150 is too much, but it’s just barely too much. OmniOutliner ranges from $39.95 to $99.95 while the drollingly awesome OmniGraffle ranges from $79.95 to $149.95. Both of them are fantastic examples of OS X applications: best of breed, damn handsome, and affordable.

Their outliner and diagramer are bundled with OS X.

OmniPricingĪs a comparison, let’s look at the OmniGroup.
#Mindjet mindmanager ipad pdf
Working on your own desktop with only PDF and image export is not. Now, that sort of setup would be worth hundreds of dollars: realtime, graphical collaboration, with “zero install” (Flash, AJAX, etc.) is incredibly valuable at the moment. That is, it works on all platforms unlike that WebEx. I’d rather have had all of us work on the same mind map in realtime, ideally through something akin to the Breeze interface. I, of course, was using MindManager to keep notes myself. It’s like a clunky virtual white-board that uses a keyboard instead of a mouse. Steve, writely fan that he is, immediately started using writely for real-time, multi-user note taking. What do I mean by “real-time, collaborative”? Technological analogs would be how RedMonk uses for real-time note taking or how I understand people use SubEthaEdit (only $35 >).įor example, Steve, James, and I started working with one of our clients this morning on what will be a longer collaborative effort. My suggestion is this: drop the price for the stand-alone version to $50 and create a real-time, collaborative version and charge the big bucks for that.
#Mindjet mindmanager ipad software
We can talk all day about quantifying the value I get out of it, but ROI approaches to software pricing barely work in the enterprise, and I don’t believe they work for consumer sales at all. I realize MindJet needs to make money and that their product is great, but software that costs more than even $50 starts to seem pricey to me now-a-days.

#Mindjet mindmanager ipad pro
The Windows version is $229 to $349, depending on how pro you want to go. In short, I use mind-maps and, thus, MindManager daily, usually several times. I love using it and it’s a boon to my professional life: see most of the maps in flickr and those in my blog as examples. MindJet graciously gave me a copy of MindManager 6 Mac for free, and I’m incredibly grateful for that. Let’s start with the most critical point first. The Bieber beat beat me to the punch with an excellent review of why mind maps are so fantastic for note taking, so I’ll try not to re-hash that too much. I am forever asiding that I’ll write a more in-depth review of MindManager.
