Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
@rasterweb lol you would go to a place called the mall and visit a store called Babbage's...
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
And in the good old days, you bought magazines that came with a bonus disk containing a whole operating system along a bunch of softwares that were yours to use forever.
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
@rasterweb “what’s a disc grandpa!”
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
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And in the good old days, you bought magazines that came with a bonus disk containing a whole operating system along a bunch of softwares that were yours to use forever.
I have a pile of these disks on my bookshelves, my girlfriend thinks that it is a waste of space and asks why I’m keeping these. I don’t need these, I can download whatever I want.
I keep these because it is so cool.
Pieces of long gone era that I have known.
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Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
Just like how my mortgage is less than tbe rent my (adult) children pay, renting is about never owning and always paying more.
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@rasterweb “what’s a disc grandpa!”
@Ashedryden It’s like a Micro SD card, but bigger… but also smaller, in a way…
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Just like how my mortgage is less than tbe rent my (adult) children pay, renting is about never owning and always paying more.
@rasterweb The disaster is one can be locked out of software you paid for if the internet is down or vendor's servers are down because you cannot authenticate that you have paid for the software. They do not even provide alternative authentication like a key. The software keeps needing re-authentication and it is not a one-off. It is like renting a house and not being able to open the door unless the telephone line is working and the landlord's answering machine is not full.
A total disaster.
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Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
@rasterweb Companies like JetBrains have a license where your subscription gets you access to the upgrades. If you stop the subscription, your free to continue to use the version up to the point that your subscription ran out. This seems quite fair to me. Also gives incentives to the company to actually improve their product and not just do nothing collecting access-fees.
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I have a pile of these disks on my bookshelves, my girlfriend thinks that it is a waste of space and asks why I’m keeping these. I don’t need these, I can download whatever I want.
I keep these because it is so cool.
Pieces of long gone era that I have known.
@MichelPatrice @rasterweb I held on to my SuseLinux 9.1 Personal box set longer than anyone could have a use for...

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@rasterweb Companies like JetBrains have a license where your subscription gets you access to the upgrades. If you stop the subscription, your free to continue to use the version up to the point that your subscription ran out. This seems quite fair to me. Also gives incentives to the company to actually improve their product and not just do nothing collecting access-fees.
@marijn LightBurn has/had a similar scheme, and I do appreciate that model over the “stop paying = lose all access” concept.
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@rasterweb The disaster is one can be locked out of software you paid for if the internet is down or vendor's servers are down because you cannot authenticate that you have paid for the software. They do not even provide alternative authentication like a key. The software keeps needing re-authentication and it is not a one-off. It is like renting a house and not being able to open the door unless the telephone line is working and the landlord's answering machine is not full.
A total disaster.
@adingbatponder Yup! It didn’t use to be that way though. I do remember offline options to verify a license for some software.
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Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
@rasterweb I have PS, Lightroom, and Aperture discs in a box somewhere. Dunno how far back of an OS I'd need to install to run them, or even if their network "activation" would work any more.
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@rasterweb I have PS, Lightroom, and Aperture discs in a box somewhere. Dunno how far back of an OS I'd need to install to run them, or even if their network "activation" would work any more.
@jerzone @rasterweb from time to time I'm still using the last good Lightroom 4.4.1, that I've bought years ago. I run it in Wine, it works fine, no problem with activation after reinstall (I guess it doesn't call home when checking the licence key), so I don't expect it to break ever.
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Just like how my mortgage is less than tbe rent my (adult) children pay, renting is about never owning and always paying more.
@rasterweb I still have my CS3-era Adobe software license serial numbers stored away in a note. Probably can’t run those on today’s hardware though. Sigh.
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Hey kids, in the olden days you bought (instead of “rented”) software and it came in a box with a disc and it was yours to use forever!
@rasterweb Worthwhile sentiment, but misleading argument.
Software in a fixed (non-updating) state always becomes obsolete. In the past, you had to buy new software at some point.
The business models have changed, but the underlying reality has not. You cannot run MS Office 98 on anything anyone's using right now.
Modern subscription models are indeed often exploitative, and yes, that's a scandal. But that doesn't make the concept wrong or bad, or invalidate the reasons why.
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Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
@rasterweb My own sense is that how, why, and how often essential support software or hardware is upgraded has been accelerating. I'm not qualified to say if that's how it should or must be, but that seems to be how it is. Consequently, application software must also upgrade more frequently, and sometimes radically. Since those upgrades cost money for the company providing them, someone else must pay for them.
Again, I agree that this relationship can be and often is exploitative.
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Well, the “forever” part was tricky because it might break due to OS upgrades or computer architecture/chip changes.
But making a one-time purchase and using software 5 or 10 years was not unheard of.
I think I paid $500 for Photoshop and it came out to under $9 per month if I do the math right… that’s for 10 years of use.
If it’s still $20 per month for a subscription and you do 10 years that’s $2,400.
@rasterweb 2/ My sense is that's the general system of frequent upgrade is necessary, but too many vendors take advantage of that fact to squeeze end-users in various ways, because current regulation does not adequately discourage that.
Regulation needs beefing up, with a few unusually egregious vendors made examples for everyone. But the subscription model is otherwise a reasonable alternative to replacing software more frequently, as long as it doesn't become exploitative.
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Just like how my mortgage is less than tbe rent my (adult) children pay, renting is about never owning and always paying more.
@rasterweb The mortgage/rent comparison is popular, but I think probably faulty, because these are also very different cost/benefit structures. A tenant may pay more per m^2, but they're also not responsible for many things that a homeowner would be. And in nearly all cases, a flat with the same floorspace and amenitites as most private homes would demand much higher rent.
In my mind, the biggest difference is that renters cannot build equity.
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