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Reckr has now been renamed Ludy, and the page is essentially a brand migration announcement. The company describes it as a set of “privacy-first” productivity apps for macOS and iOS, with the original team, quality commitment, and privacy commitment remaining unchanged. For existing users, apps, settings, and subscriptions will be preserved, and automatic updates will continue through the original App Store listings.
Products confirmed on the page include TextActions, LudyType iOS Keyboard, R-Transcribe, LudyVox macOS Dictation, and TextGlance macOS OCR. They cover use cases such as text processing, iOS keyboard input, transcription, macOS dictation, and OCR. Overall, this is more of a personal productivity toolkit than a typical enterprise SaaS platform. The page does not disclose enterprise software capabilities such as team collaboration, permission roles, admin consoles, audit logs, or workflow configuration.
Pricing information is very limited. The page only states that existing subscriptions will be preserved, with no visible plan tiers, prices, free version, or trial policy. In terms of deployment, the products appear to be primarily native macOS/iOS apps distributed via App Store listings and automatic updates. It is not stated whether they rely on cloud services or support self-hosting. Third-party integrations and API/developer support are also not disclosed.
Ludy clearly emphasizes a privacy-first approach and says it will maintain its commitment to user privacy, but the page does not provide details on encryption, data storage location, or compliance such as SOC 2/GDPR. As a result, it can be considered privacy-oriented, but this should not be taken as evidence of enterprise-grade security or compliance capabilities. For support, the announcement provides a new support email address: [email protected].
The main advantage is a clear migration path with relatively low risk for existing users. The product range covers input, dictation, transcription, and OCR, making it suitable for privacy-conscious individual users within the Apple ecosystem. The downside is the lack of public information, especially around pricing, enterprise management, integrations, and security details. Based on the current information, it is not well suited for direct evaluation as an enterprise procurement option.
The page does not provide information about access from mainland China, payment methods, or localization, so china_access can only be marked as unknown. Users in China may want to compare alternatives such as Apple’s native Dictation/Live Text, iFlytek Input, Feishu Minutes, and Tencent Docs OCR, while paying particular attention to App Store availability and whether subscription payments work smoothly.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on reckr.app official site.
reckr.app is an Unknown Online Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach reckr.app directly.