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by lycopodiopsida
232 days ago
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> For instance DevonThink. I don’t know how solid the company is, what their future looks like. Oh, they exist, but did a rug pull with a switch to half-assed subscription model last year, increasing the cost threefold over the same time period. But it is ok, we all know that making a proprietary software a cornerstone of your workflow is a long-term risk. I've dropped them and never looked back. |
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If the market is saturated and they're not going to sell any new copies, then they're just going to go out of business.
If they have existing customers which want the software to continue to exist on an operating system designed to make existing software stop working every few years... then customers paying for the privilege of keeping the thing working on Mac OS seems like the only option.
(For reference, on Windows you can just run stuff from 1995 with basically no problems.)
I hate subscriptions as much as the next guy, but if something is mission critical and irreplaceable, the $15/month for "I need this to keep working" seems pretty reasonable. If there's a non-trivial number of people in a similar situation, maybe they could work something out.