Facet — browse
A full visual grid of your apps with folders, pages, and Launchpad layout import. Open, scan, click. Built for people who recognize apps by icon and position, not exact name.
Alfred is a beloved keyboard launcher and automation tool — a search bar that runs workflows, snippets, and clipboard history. Facet is a visual Launchpad-style app grid you browse and click. They overlap on “launching apps,” but they’re built for opposite habits.
A full visual grid of your apps with folders, pages, and Launchpad layout import. Open, scan, click. Built for people who recognize apps by icon and position, not exact name.
A keyboard search bar plus the Powerpack: workflows, text snippets, clipboard history, and deep macOS automation. Built for keyboard-first power users who type everything.
| Need | Facet | Alfred |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Visual app grid (Launchpad-style) | Keyboard launcher + automation |
| Visual app grid | Yes — the core of the app | No — search bar only |
| Folders & pages | Yes, with Launchpad import | No spatial layout |
| Keyboard search | Yes, search and launch | Yes — its whole interface |
| Workflows & automation | Not the focus | Powerpack workflows, snippets, clipboard |
| Pricing | $14.99 one-time | Free core; Powerpack one-time (£34+ / ~$43+) |
| Learning curve | Minimal — open and browse | Higher for workflows |
| Best fit | People who want Launchpad back | Keyboard power users who automate |
Pricing reflects each vendor’s published model at time of writing: Alfred’s core is free with a one-time Powerpack (Single License around £34, Mega Supporter around £59, per alfredapp.com/shop); Facet is a single $14.99 purchase. Check the vendor sites for current pricing.
Both avoid subscriptions, which is refreshing — but they’re priced for different things. Alfred’s Powerpack (roughly $43–$74 depending on tier) buys a deep automation platform. Facet’s $14.99 buys one focused thing done well: the Launchpad grid back, with folders and import. If you only want app browsing, paying for Alfred’s automation engine is more than you need; if you want workflows and snippets, Facet doesn’t try to offer them.
You miss the Launchpad grid, keep apps in folders, and want a simple, paid-once visual launcher with almost no learning curve.
You live on the keyboard and want workflows, snippets, clipboard history, and macOS automation more than a visual app grid.
Alfred for keyboard automation, Facet for the visual app grid Alfred was never meant to provide.