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by AlbertCory
682 days ago
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I went quite a ways up the parent chain without seeing anyone seriously proposing that. All executables become unusable eventually (except maybe for IBM mainframes), so "pay once and you're done forever" is inherently impossible. Unless you keep running every part of the hardware / software stack, which works only until some piece of hardware wears out. |
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exe34 15 hours ago | root | parent | prev | next [–]
> $495 per application. it was a lifetime licence though. you can probably still run it today.
Also:
that's where we disagree: you don't usually need to stay current. as long as it does the job, it's current enough. if there's new features available that would add value to the business, then you have a business case to buy a new license. 95% of software update haven't really added any value since the early 00s.
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Maybe I misinterpreted but the implication is I could run something from the early 00s without changes which--while true in some cases--I wouldn't do in general.