Not Black Friday, but in the UK and maybe other countries, Amazon Warehouse is currently doing a 20% off sale, so 20% off the price when you get to checkout.
I've had a few good "As New" things off there in the past, worth having a look.
There's also a 50% off books sale on the UK Warehouse, loads of tech books, though I don't know how many decent ones are left.
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Specific Black Friday deals though: Quest Apps on sale:
https://www.oculus.com/experiences/quest/section/15301901340...
Web Development:
- ProxyMan - https://proxyman.io/ — web debugging proxy (30% off the first year)
- Tower - https://www.git-tower.com/ — powerful Git Client (50% off the first year)
- DevUtils - https://devutils.com/ — set of small developer tools (50% off)
For overall productivity:
- BetterTouchTool - https://folivora.ai/ — customize input devices (50% off)
- Trickster - https://www.apparentsoft.com/trickster — handy to access recent files (50% off)
For images/screen capturing:
- Affinity Suite - https://affinity.serif.com/ — (40% off for the Universal License)
A great alternative to Adobe's suite. Version 2 is fresh from the oven. Affinity Photo = Photoshop, Affinity Designer = Illustrator, Affinity Publisher = InDesign. The Universal License includes Mac, Windows, and iPadOS apps.
- Xnapper - https://xnapper.com — Screenshot tool (50% off)
- ScreenFlow - https://www.telestream.net/screenflow/overview.htm — Screencast tool (20% off)
The first: I bought "unlimited" worldwide maps from Osmand, which I use a TON for offline maps when I bike. It's $9.99 for unlimited worldwide offline map downloads right now. Great deal if you'd like to move away from Google Maps for navigation (not so great for business search, but it's slowly getting there!)
The second: not actually a Black Friday deal, but I recently switched to https://purelymail.com/ for email. It's a one-man show, significantly cheaper than the competition because... it's not bootstrapping some massive startup or running off VC capital. If you just want IMAP for desktop/mobile for cheap, but can't self-host because Google will throw all of your emails into spam, this is a great option. $10/year or less estimated cost. And it's fully encrypted on their servers, not used for advertising, pretty much exactly what you want if you JUST want mail.
Oh, and the Gigabyte M28U 144hz 4k 28" monitor that I use is now down to an all-time-low cost of $450. If you're looking for a beautiful monitor for your home office, this is it.
There's a few regional equivalents as well. I know of
r/bapcsalescanada
r/bapcsalesuk
r/BaPCSalesEurope
r/bapcsalesaustralia
r/bapcsalesgermany
It's a simplified video editor that removes pauses and dead air, and creates a cut list you can then import into a "real" editor.
Saves a bunch of time if you're doing talking-head videos, vlogging, podcasts, screencasts... the sorts of content where the first step of editing is to chop out the long pauses and mistakes. I originally built it because I was doing screencasts and wanted the process to go faster :D
This is a really nice piece of tech that has helped me to work outside the house with peace of mind. Can keep my phone charged (which I use for tethering) for over a week, no problem. Drains way quicker when charging my M1, but that one has far less battery issues when compared to my phone.
The discount is real, as well. I know because I bought it recently, but you can also check it against camelcamelcamel or keepa.
Companies release products 6-12 months in advance. On the day of their release they are at their most valuable. Every day that goes by they slowly lose a little bit of desirability. For practicality, and human marketing reasons, companies do not adjust their prices every day to reflect the reduction in demand. Instead they gather all the erosion into one big clump and release it in a frenzy on Black Friday.
So are there "deals" on Black Friday? Not really, in the sense that you are buying a product that is of truly lower value. At the same time, many people don't care about the newness of various products, so are happy to trade that time for money in their pocket. In short, Black Friday is about segmentation than it is "deals". It's a way to charge the most eager top dollar at the beginning of the curve, while also cashing in later with the rest at the end of the product lifecycle.
Thank you.
Otherwise, there is a huge chance to buy something you don't actually need, just because it's a good deal. Then it will be a good deal for the seller :)
https://www.razer.com/ca-en/gaming-egpus/Razer-Core-X/RC21-0...
M1 Airs are 800 and great for your lower tech relatives.
Another already affordable VPS provider, Contabo, also seems to have nice deals: https://contabo.com/en/ (they expire in an hour at the time of writing)
The Namecheap domain registrar that also offers e-mail and other stuff has some ongoing deals: https://www.namecheap.com/domain-web-hosting-ssl-deals/black...
Asus TUF F15 at B&H: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1702433-REG/asus_fx50...
Acer Predator Helios at Best Buy: https://www.bestbuy.com/site/acer-predator-helios-300-15-6-f...
They're really almost identical; I ended up buying the TUF (which has since gone up but only by $20) because it had a larger SSD. I'm sure somebody else can do better - please comment here if you do! - but this seems to set a pretty good benchmark.
Fitbod Elite - Workout tracking/planning - 40% off - 47.99 annually - I was paying 12.99$ a month!!!
Plex Pass Lifetime - 25% off - 90$ once - Regular $120
I have used YNAB for budgeting for years. I wish I could find a discount on that. Still keeping an eye out for any other similarly useful deals on stuff I already pay for.
It can help you write anything: from a cold email to a Facebook Ad to a blog post...
It has super affordable and generous Black Friday deals:
-> One-time $6.99 for 200 credits
-> One-time $11.99 for 300 credits + 25 FREE
-> One time $16.99 450 credits + 50 FREE
I considered the newer version but the reviews made it seem like it wasn't a huge upgrade and in some ways a downgrade, like the newer version doesn't fold to a smaller size.
- Laracasts - https://laracasts.com - Screencasts for modern developer, 45% off
- DevUtils - https://devutils.com/ — set of small developer tools, 50% off
It's also used as a commercial device by companies directly nowadays but the good deals there are usually worth checking out.
- 20% off https://getimg.ai (text-to-image and AI editor) monthly subscription for 3 months
The coupon code is on their blog.
That said I'm not sure if this is a Black Friday deal or a permanent reduction to be price-competitive with Intel Raptor Lake.
A no code documentation tool for building & hosting Knowledge bases, User guides, Product docs or any self-serve guide for your end user. Supports custom domain, private documentation, Team( so you can bring in your agency or anyone to work on them), multi-language and lots more.
I've also collected deals from other indie creators, publishers, etc on my blog (https://learnbyexample.github.io/programming-deals-2022/). Some highlights:
* Python books by Michael Driscoll - https://www.blog.pythonlibrary.org/2022/11/22/python-black-f...
* Python Morsels - https://www.pythonmorsels.com/pricing/
* Boost Your Django DX - https://adamchainz.gumroad.com/l/byddx and Speed Up Your Django Tests - https://adamchainz.gumroad.com/l/suydt
* Python, Git, and Pandas courses - https://twitter.com/reuvenmlerner/status/1595402066213601280
* Practical Guide to Technical Blogging - https://bhavaniravi.gumroad.com/l/technical-blogging/WRITELI...
* Complete Guide to CSS Flex and Grid - https://shrutibalasa.gumroad.com/l/css-flex-and-grid/BlackFr...
* Explain Ideas Visually - https://twitter.com/OzolinsJanis/status/1595743978531348480
* Leanpub Monthly Sale - https://mailchi.mp/leanpub/monthly-sale-2022-november-black-...
* Infosec - https://github.com/0x90n/InfoSec-Black-Friday
It allows you to send multiple types of content to your Kindle: Reddit posts, Hacker News discussions, Twitter threads & newsletters. It supports multiple file types too: PDF, DOCX, markdown etc.
https://www.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/deals/apple-black-friday...
That being said, I grabbed a lifetime Laracasts subscription for $219 - about 2 years of the ordinary yearly price ($99, on sale at $54). Great resource for new & rusty Laravel developers.
Thundercontent AI Writer (140+ languages, 20+ tools, based on GPT-3) : $7/ month (usually $49/month) -- https://thundercontent.com Article.Audio (Convert articles to audio with AI): $39 Lifetime deal (usually $19/month) -- https://article.audio
Coupon code: BLACKFRIDAY2022