http://ish.re/1598


On 9 May 2013 21:00, seatzb98 <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Won't happen for me. And most of the folks in the business that I know. It
> will drive users to other products. There are some good GNU products and
> they will probably thrive after this. I will use my CS5 until the computer
> crashes and have to replace it. At that time, I will move to the myriad of
> other products. If you do a google search you find that the online and
> smartphone crown dominates. Keep your original disks. I have Photoshop 7
> (ancient) and it will work if needed.
>
>
> --- In [email protected], Gregg Eshelman <g_alan_e@...>
> wrote:
> >
> > Sounds a lot like Microsoft's plan where you can pay monthly for an XBox
> 360 and XBox live service. In a year you've spent more than just buying the
> XBox.
> >
> > 'Course the Adobe plan does provide access to all Adobe software, but to
> make it worth it you'd need to use several of the products quite often.
> >
> > Another issue is what about upgrading? If Adobe changes a file format or
> alters or removes some feature or function that you've come to depend on,
> you're SOL? Sorry, we've updated your subscription and you have to use the
> latest release, like it or not?
> >
> > I've never been a fan of "cloud" services, which have existed long
> before someone thought up that stupid name. At any time it can be shut down
> or go away for any number of reasons. Company goes bankrupt or gets bought
> and the new owner "decides to take the company in a different direction" or
> the company just decides to quit the whole "cloud" thing.
> >
> > I lost a website when the ISP I was with was bought out and shut down
> without warning, the day before Thanksgiving. This was circa 1998 or 1999.
> One day *poof*, no access, nothing. Found out the new owners had come in
> the middle of the night, packed up all the servers and everything else and
> left one guy with one phone to field a few thousand phone calls.
> >
> > A perfect example of the "We're tired of this shiznit" version is when
> Microsoft shut down Live for the original XBox and original XBox games on
> the 360, on April 15, 2010. Such a nice day too, Tax Day in the USA.
> >
> > Another classic example is Circuit City's Divx no-return encrypted DVD
> rentals. Pay a low price for the movie then pay the vendor for every day
> you want to watch it. Pay a larger fee for unlimited viewing (Silver plan)
> but only on one player. The "Gold" option to unlock a disc for unlimited
> play on any Divx player was never implemented, nor was the option to
> command all the players to permanently unlock for all the discs. Instead,
> when the market shunned the Divx scheme, Circuit city just shut down the
> authentication server, turning all the Divx discs into permanently useless
> trash, except for the ones people paid retail prices for the privilege of
> being able to use only on a single device.
> >
> > Pay once, use forever, all data stored locally is more secure and
> nothing the company does or what happens to the company can affect your use
> of the product. Remember Chuck Woolery's tagline from the early years of
> Wheel of Fortune "You bought that, it's yours to keep.".
> >
>
>  
>


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