  Nightfall My Goal Is To Deny Yours Premium,MVM join:2001-08-03 Grand Rapids, MI clubs:
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| reply to KrK Re: Hmmm.....
A lot of software companies are moving to the software rental instead of buying outright. Business customers have been subject to this by IBM and Microsoft. It is only fitting that the consumer market gets hit as well.
I would still want to have a hard copy of the product though. If I can download the CD image and a CD key and burn it myself and save $10, then I prefer that.  -- My Domain Nightfall's Hockey and Life Journal |
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  NOVA_Guy Embarassed to live in a blue state Premium join:2002-03-05 Purcellville, VA
| said by Nightfall : A lot of software companies are moving to the software rental instead of buying outright. Business customers have been subject to this by IBM and Microsoft. It is only fitting that the consumer market gets hit as well.
I can think of a more appropriate, less PG-rated, way of saying "gets hit" in the above sentence... 
Didn't Microsoft announce something like this a while back with their .NET strategy? I seem to recall hearing something about upcoming versions of MS Office being streamed/run off of Microsoft's servers. I don't know if this would also include centralized document storage, but I wouldn't put that past them either.
I can see it now: businesses across America losing access to their programs and control over their documents by the minute. Forget to pay your monthly software "rental" fee? Microsoft can literally shut your business down in an instant. Or better yet-- maybe they'll just "share" that proposal you've been working on with a few of your competitors.... Puts a whole new twist to "trusted" computing, doesn't it?
I'd trust Microsoft with my business and my documents about as much as I'd trust Bill Clinton at a Miss America pageant...  -- Cox cable: the hallmark questionable business practices and lousy cable service! |
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  AthlGrond Premium,MVM join:2002-04-25 Aurora, CO | reply to Nightfall I have seen this kind of licensing from Unix software vendors for years. I guess that makes it just one more thing that MS will be borrowing from Unix.  |
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  Nightfall My Goal Is To Deny Yours Premium,MVM join:2001-08-03 Grand Rapids, MI clubs:
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| reply to NOVA_Guy You can blame IBM for it actually.
IBM has been doing this kind of licensing for its AS400 mainframe software for many years now. If you don't pay, you don't get support or newer versions. Once you do pay, it is cheaper to stay in the plan then leave it and come back in. Symantec was the second to do it. Microsoft just started doing it last year.
There are advantages. You get the latest version of software. It is easy to budget out how much you will spend in a year or two years on software.
I am not saying there aren't disadvantages, but it does benefit the customer. -- My Domain Nightfall's Hockey and Life Journal |
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  Nightfall My Goal Is To Deny Yours Premium,MVM join:2001-08-03 Grand Rapids, MI clubs:
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| reply to AthlGrond said by AthlGrond : I have seen this kind of licensing from Unix software vendors for years. I guess that makes it just one more thing that MS will be borrowing from Unix.
When Unix can run our AS400 Mainframe and SQL databases with the uptime of our AS400 and Windows 2000 servers, let me know. 
Oh, and when I want Unix support on all of it, I don't want to be treated like a moron like most of the Unix gurus do. -- My Domain Nightfall's Hockey and Life Journal |
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  AthlGrond Premium,MVM join:2002-04-25 Aurora, CO
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| said by Nightfall : Oh, and when I want Unix support on all of it, I don't want to be treated like a moron like most of the Unix gurus do.
Wouldn't that kind of take the fun out of it for the support people? 
I was just pointing out that this little (annoying) subscription idea did not originate in Redmond. |
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  KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK
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| said by AthlGrond : I was just pointing out that this little (annoying) subscription idea did not originate in Redmond.
Heh. From history, it seems precious little originates in Redmond, does it.  -- "When the day comes that anyone can bend our countrys laws and lawmakers to serve selfish, competitive ends, that day democratic government dies" -- Preston Tucker, 1948 (Yep, it's dead.) |
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 cableblows
join:2001-06-17 Indianapolis, IN
| reply to Nightfall not i, if i buy a cd, which i do for games and software, I own it, not MS or anyone else and i don't care what the lic. agreement says! I did try this, once, and i couldn't get a refund when i found it didn't work as promised! i am still working on it. |
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