harryting
Lifetime Supporting Member
It's the latter... so the price goes up even more as more licenses are bought. The annual bill ran through my mailbox once and I almost fall out of the chair.
that's not unusual for software in the corporate IT world. Take AutoCAD and even MS Office for example, it's now on a subscription model and a lot of app now on the cloud so you pay the vendor for the cloud service. In some way, it makes sense for a corporation because it make annual expense easier to manage and predictable.
In my personal life, I hate such models which is why I'm quitting Quicken (a personal finance software) which I used for decades and all other product by Intuit because now they switch to such pricing model.
that's not unusual for software in the corporate IT world. Take AutoCAD and even MS Office for example, it's now on a subscription model and a lot of app now on the cloud so you pay the vendor for the cloud service. In some way, it makes sense for a corporation because it make annual expense easier to manage and predictable.
In my personal life, I hate such models which is why I'm quitting Quicken (a personal finance software) which I used for decades and all other product by Intuit because now they switch to such pricing model.