This pretty much hits the nail on the head IMO.

A number of factors converging has made it so that people have been slowly
conditioned to think DCC software and its sales and updates right now are
OK to be as cheap as they are on the frontload expenditure (a couple to
three and half grands for software with some of the largest and most varied
and complex sets of functionalities ever), and something worth
"subscribing" to.

The truth is subscription, in any sane world, would require a vibrant,
lively and worthy eco-system of user base, community and software support.

At present time subscription means you get the occasional SP/ext, which is
usually borked beyond repair and will take another couple fixes to be
fixed, or will be fixed in the next major (Maya 2014 ext had a bucketload
of features but turned out unusably broken due to a ridiculously nasty
shapes bug). At one point upgrading becomes a game of what bugs you can
live with, the old ones you know, or the new ones introduced elsewhere
while fixing those.
Solid releases exist, of course, at least within restricted domains of
functionalities one might be interested in, and that's why often times
people stick to a release for five years. It's not that they don't want to
upgrad, it's that it's the ONE safe spot in a bloody mine field of bugs and
disasters that are behind you (older versions that didn't work), and around
you (new versions that break a different piece every time).

There is no community support worth mentioning, the Area is a wasteland of
despair where the only noise is that of noob souls wailing in despair, the
"app shop" useless (the few contributors are all giving up on it when it
takes weeks to months for AD to clear a free minor update to their stuff).
There is no such thing as a quick fix, let alone weekly or forthnightly
builds.
The support itself is useless to anybody but the most superficial user.
Training/educational content of any depth is scarce to unavailable (a few
smatterings of superficial stuff again, at best), and there is no effort in
sight to change that.
Lastly, being on subscription provides with no added network or interaction
at all.

There IS a thriving eco-system around some of the softwares, but all of it,
and I literally mean ALL of it, is down to your social network, reputation,
and putting in the hard miles to connect and keep track of who's who and
what websites to follow.
Beta testing, friends on the inside, the right blogs and websites, third
party software and training providers... those often work and work to
levels you simply wouldn't expect a completely anarchic system to, and they
are free, and usually absolutely unsupported by AD, which instead keeps
throwing money or hours at the big studios that steer their main horse the
most.
This isn't bad, and I'm not having a go at AD, my current situation is
actually quite alright in fact, but I find that when I really look at it
from a distance there is simply no incentive for me to wish to pay money on
a regular basis to AD. The best is all free, or user driven, or both.

I'm not against subscription model, not at all actually, but AD and Adobe
are putting the cart before the horses, changing their business model well
before they are anywhere within a light year of being able to foster and
support the eco-system , sales and dev models that such business model
requires for users to be treated fairly.

Right now it's a lose/lose situation AFAIC, and a huge demand on my trust
ahead of time when track record past is diametrically opposite to what one
would consider encouraging.


On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 8:31 AM, Matt Lind <ml...@carbinestudios.com> wrote:

>
> When I hear the word ‘subscription’, I think of magazine subscription
> where content is provided on a regular and continuing basis like a stream
> and it’s the customer’s prerogative to jump into the stream or bail out.
> Applied to the case of software, I would intuitively expect builds and
> point releases provided on a regular intervals throughout the year.  A
> download manager would be able to ‘diff’ what you have with what’s
> available and patch your install appropriately.  New builds should be
> available weekly or bi-weekly or monthly at worst case, and perhaps a point
> release every 8-10 weeks, with a major release once per year.  The current
> model of getting one release per year and maybe a service pack or two later
> does not qualify as a subscription in my book.  Service packs are “damn, we
> screwed up.  Here are the fixes to our mistakes and the things we didn’t
> finish”.  The fact I have to download a service pack should be viewed as an
> inconvenience to the customer and avoided at all costs, not the customer
> pining for relief saying, “thank god I can now get work done and go home at
> a decent hour”.****
>
> ** **
>
> Yes, as stated in earlier posts, the logic and business mindset has been
> conditioned to be topsy-turvy.****
>
>
>

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