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Subscriptions dashboard is live

2026-01-09
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The new subscriptions command is live on ioa.fun, and it is built for anyone who wants a clear view of recurring bills in a terminal-style dashboard. Subscriptions are easy to forget because they are small, frequent charges spread across streaming, software, cloud storage, fitness, and shopping. This tool brings those costs into one place, lets you search them quickly, and gives you a simple breakdown of monthly and yearly impact.

To use it, type:

ioa > subscriptions
ioa.fun subscriptions dashboard showing list and spend by category chart

That opens the subscriptions dashboard. You will see a list of popular services, a search field, category filters, and a spending chart. Everything is interactive. Select or deselect items, filter to a category like Streaming or Software, and the totals update immediately. You can also toggle between monthly and yearly views to see the real cost of each choice. The idea is to make spending feel visible and concrete, without a complicated setup flow or a long form to fill out.

This subscriptions tracker is intentionally dark and terminal-themed to fit the ioa.fun aesthetic. It is not a finance app with accounts and passwords, and it is not a budgeting platform. It is a fast utility for exploration, a way to understand the shape of your subscription spending. The UI is direct: checkboxes, clean prices, and a chart that updates in real time. It is meant to feel like a terminal command that instantly becomes a dashboard.

ioa.fun subscriptions spending header showing an estimate of how much you could be speding monthly

Search is the fastest way to find a service. Type "netflix", "gym", "vpn", or "cloud" and the list narrows instantly. Filters are just as quick. Tap Streaming to isolate entertainment costs, or Software to see how developer tools add up. There is a “show selected only” toggle to see your current choices without the noise of the full catalog. Combined, these controls make it easy to answer common questions like: how much am I spending on streaming? What happens if I drop two subscriptions? What is the annual cost if I keep everything?

Charts are the second half of the experience. The dashboard includes a spend-by-category chart with a legend, so you can see which bucket dominates your monthly spend. The chart updates whenever you toggle items, switch monthly to yearly, or apply filters. A number alone is useful, but a visual breakdown is easier to understand at a glance. It also makes tradeoffs more intuitive, like noticing that Software or Shopping is larger than you thought.

The data is intentionally simple. Each subscription has a name, category, and monthly price. That simplicity makes it fast. The chart does not need external APIs. The filters are immediate. The UI stays responsive even on low-powered devices. That matters because the goal is not heavy analytics, it is quick clarity. The subscriptions page is a tool for instant decisions, not a full financial ledger.

SEO-wise, this command targets searches like “subscription spending calculator”, “subscription tracker”, “monthly subscriptions list”, “subscription cost breakdown”, and “online subscription dashboard”. The page is designed to be discoverable and readable by search engines and AI assistants. If someone searches for a simple subscription spending tool, the subscriptions command should be visible and useful.

There are real-world scenarios where this is handy. Maybe you want to reduce monthly costs without cancelling everything. Maybe you are comparing streaming bundles against a single premium service. Maybe you are looking at recurring charges across multiple developer tools. In each case, the subscriptions dashboard provides a quick estimate and a simple visual. It helps you decide, even if you do not care about the exact cents.

The subscriptions command is also a good example of the ioa.fun philosophy: command-first, page-second. You do not click through menus. You type a command, and the interface responds with the right tool. That is the loop we want to reinforce. It is fast, it is memorable, and it keeps the experience in the terminal mindset.

We will continue to expand this dashboard. Future improvements could include inline price editing, custom subscriptions, and exporting a list for personal tracking. But the core behavior will remain: search, filter, select, and see totals immediately. The terminal is still the interface, and the goal is to keep it quick and focused.

If you are exploring ioa.fun for the first time, the subscriptions dashboard is a great place to start. It is visual, interactive, and practical. If you are returning, it is another useful command to keep in your toolkit alongside json-pretty, hash, timestamp, and timer. The terminal playground is growing, and subscriptions is a strong step toward a richer set of everyday utilities.

Try it now with subscriptions, and see how your subscription stack feels when it is visible. That clarity is the point.

Try Subscriptions Command