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That's exactly the method I use as well. There's one app that I use that an old update adds advertising, and breaks most of the functionality. Based on the reviews, further updates do nothing to improve the broken bits, and made the advertising even more intrusive.

I see no need to update a perfectly functional piece of free software and turn into a crippled piece of ad-delivery-software.

If I get careless and hit the "update all" button, or get click-happy in the list of updates, the old version ends up in the trash can. If I still don't catch it and dump the trash, I can still go back because I've got the old ipa sitting in my "Old IOS Apps" directory.




Sounds like Angry Birds.

There was one game that I had (Clickomania HD?) that went from a full version that cost money to a free version with 3/4 of the functions removed and ads added in one update. It's been sitting in the "hey, update available!" section of my iTunes for close to two years.


A unit conversions utility that has a very nice, clean UI with a focus on functionality, not on "what trendy widget can we force in there next?"

Well, had, anyway.




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