On 2011 Jan 25, at 0:16, Lee wrote:

> I've since read filemaker's explanation and its obvious there is no way it 
> will work. I've already advised 2 clients to not bother upgrading their iMacs 
> unless they're prepared to upgrade filemaker. 
> Both have decided that the solution is more important and they're existing 
> machines are working fine. They don't want to mess around with changes to 
> their screen views either. 
> They would have the extra costs of upgrading filemaker along with their new 
> iMacs costs.
> Problem solved, do nothing.


More properly, problem postponed.

I hope your clients are setting aside money for upgrades down the road, because 
the day will come when one or another factor (hardware, software, OS, 
connectivity, etc.) is going to become insistent, and then they're going to 
have multiple things to deal with all at once. When (not if) that occasion 
arises, it's very important to have a transition plan in place, because if 
anything goes wrong, it's most likely the last thing changed that caused it.

I personally always encourage all of my clients to keep up to date on 
everything, because the various components co-evolve, like bees and flowers. I 
chalk up the cost to the same sort of common-sense expense that people more 
readily understand when you paint it in terms of changing the oil and getting 
periodic tune-ups for your car; it's a relatively small cost to protect a 
good-sized investment.

Of course, since I work mainly with non-profit organizations that are 
chronically strapped for cash, I have a lot more experience seeing my advice 
ignored than followed, but I still feel morally obliged to give it.

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