

(Lord knows I don’t like to keep receipts around, but sometimes there are ones which you know you’ll need.)

This is great for snapping a photo of a potentially-important receipt and then tossing the physical copy of it. Moreover you can add a note for each transaction, and you can even snap a photo or add a photo from your iPhone’s camera library. You can add you own tags to expenses by sliding the tag chart over to the left and then tapping and holding on one of the three dots. You can set a 4-digit passcode for when you launch the app. In case you don’t plug your iPhone in to your computer often (I sure don’t), Saver has an option to do OTA backups to This way you launch it, add a transaction, and be on your way.Īutomatic data backup to their secure servers. Since Saver lets you choose which screen you want to appear when you launch the app, you can tell it to bring up the New Entry pane upon launch. But 9 times out of 10 you’re launching the app so you can quickly add a new expense and be done with it. Most financial apps like this insist on believing that when you launch the app it must be so you can see the money you’ve spent. You can set which startup screen you prefer. Saver gets iPhone users: there’s an iTunes category that has sub-categories for music, movies, shows, Apps, and books. Tapping on a color of the pie chart drills down to a detailed view of that category’s expenses. When looking at the overview of your budget, Saver shows you a colorful pie chart. Here are a few things about saver that I find especially clever: Regardless of the task - adding expenses, viewing past transactions, getting a high-level look at your budget, etc. Only an iOS developer would take the time and the care to build a financial app that is so splendid looking.īut it’s not all looks - the functionality of Saver has also been well-designed.
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It’s an app full of subtle animations and well-placed pixels, and they all add up to something wonderful. And the design and attention to detail are still top-notch. It has a similar feel to what you would see from a Tapbots app, but custom designs in Saver are not quite as as heavy handed. With its completely custom UI, Saver looks simply fantastic. It’s been featured by Apple, has been ranked as the #1 Financial App in iTunes, and has been praised by the likes of MacStories, Minimal Mac, and The iPhone Blog. Saver is, by far, the most attractive and clever expense-tracking app I have seen on the iPhone. My thanks to Alex Solonsky for sponsoring the RSS feed this week to promote his iPhone app, Saver.
