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Software Stats

'It's Not You. Software Has Gotten Far More Expensive' (capiche.com) 145

A SaaS "price transparency" site at Capiche.com writes that "It's not just you: software has gotten far more expensive," citing their survey of 100 business applications. Software prices went up 62% on average over the past decade -- over three times faster than inflation, outpacing even rent and healthcare. Today's iPhone XR, by comparison, costs 25% more than 2009's iPhone 3GS (or 67% more if comparing the iPhone XS). Some apps went up far more drastically, though even if you removed the ones whose price went up more than 200%, software still on average went up 42% -- or over double the average inflation rate... [I]f you paid $9.99 a month for business software in 2009, there's a good chance you pay $16.18 for it today -- if not $19.78.

Of the hundred business apps we surveyed, sixty-seven raised their prices an average of 98% in the decade between 2009 and 2019. Fourteen lowered their prices an average of 28%, and nineteen apps kept their prices the same... Notably, if the apps you used raised their prices, odds are their prices nearly doubled over the past decade. That's perhaps even more noticeable than if all of your apps went up a few percent...

in an industry where we were long accustomed to getting more for less -- an industry where that still holds for most physical products -- software has gone up in price three times faster than inflation. That's hard to ignore.

All of their data is available in a public spreadsheet on Google Sheets, and they ultimately argue that today free "most often a strategy, a means not an end. Apple gives away software to sell devices; Google gives away storage to get you to store more so you'll upgrade."
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'It's Not You. Software Has Gotten Far More Expensive'

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  • by Mal-2 ( 675116 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:50PM (#59171910) Homepage Journal

    Free apps and services are the $2 milk that's way at the back of the grocery store and generally sells out by noon -- a loss leader to get you in the door so you have to walk by the candy and potato chips on the way out.

    • ...but can you EAT your 2 Dollar app and have it too? =)
    • The "Free" apps are often "free" for base options. That's how they get you. If you look at the revenue generated by the top apps in the app store right now almost all of them are F2P.

      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @05:07PM (#59172178)

        I usually can't tell, normally I don't get further than "they want WHAT permissions?"

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Same. Any app, whether desktop or mobile, that artificially wants permissions beyond the scope of what the software is expected to do is out. The biggest offenders being automatic updates/update checks, spyware/telemetry, location, camera, microphone, contacts, advertisements, in app purchases/crippled functionality/nags and elevated (admin) permissions.

          This is why I get most of my software from open source repositories and all of my games from GOG.com. Most other software developers these days are nosy, en

        • And then it turns out, if I just refuse whatever isn't what I want, I eventually find an app repository where everything is free, and if I don't like the permissions I can download the code and change them before installing.

          People say all this stuff about having cake and also eating cake, I say, learn how to bake.

          • I really wish there were a payment system that worked with F-Droid. I know it sounds trivial, but the NFC based payment systems are one of the few ways to pay for fuel without getting your card skimmed at a pump. GPay won't work for obvious reasons.

    • by ranton ( 36917 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @06:59PM (#59172378)

      Some of the examples they gave were also of applications raising their prices because they increased the services rendered. They gave one example of software going from $9.99 per month to $11.99 per month, but with four times more storage offered. Saying that is a 20% price increase is disingenuous. You could just as easily say it was a 70% price drop per GB of storage offered.

      Our company's Salesforce bill has more than doubled in the past five years, but we went from just using their CRM to also building client portals, utilizing their Marketing Cloud, and adding Mulesoft as part of our integration stack. So does that count as a 100% price increase, even if our per license cost for CRM licenses dropped?

      • It could be less if it wasn't subscription based. Hard to tell. I know a lot of people are doing things "in the cloud" because that's the latest thing to do. But it's like leasing a car every 2 years vs paying once and running it for ten or twenty for maintenance fees only (I just got a new car after 20 years because it finally started to cost more than minimal maintenance costs... I think I saved at least a few times the cost of my new car doing it this way).

        Depending on circumstance, it may be cheaper, b

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        Ah shite, I'd forgotten Salesforce.com had bought Mulesoft.

        How's it doing post-acquisition? Are they improving it or just using it as glue between their other acquisitions?

  • by jonsmirl ( 114798 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @02:53PM (#59171912) Homepage

    These costs are not significant. Does it really matter if your $5/mth fee went to $15/mth when the human using the app is earning $3,000/mth or more? Only a single app surveyed was over $1,000/mth.

    I thought they were going to say expensive things like the price of an Oracle DB licenses went way up, which it did.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:04PM (#59171932)

      Does it really matter if your $5/mth fee went to $15/mth when the human using the app is earning $3,000/mth or more?

      Indeed. My wife runs an app business, and I had a hard time convincing her that if she doubled her prices she would lose 20-30% of her customers, but make far more profit on those that remained.

      So she ran an A-B test with the higher price, and sure enough, her revenue went up by 50% while support costs declined. Now she is thinking of cranking the price up even higher.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:45PM (#59172008)

          It's a delicate balance between market share (part of a long term plan) and profit.

          Traditionally, this is true. But not so much in the app business.

          Her revenue is 95% iOS, and 5% Android. In the Apple App Store, Apple takes a 30% cut of revenue, and they list apps to maximize their own profit. So if an app sells for $14.99, and a competitor sells for $4.99, it will still be listed higher even if it is half as likely to sell, because the expected profit for Apple ($4.50 vs $1.50) is more than twice as much.

          So if you price to maximize your own profit, you will ALSO maximize Apple's profit, and thus your visibility to potential customers.

          This may be different if you do your own marketing outside the App Store, but she doesn't. She tried Google and FB ads, and they were not cost effective.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @06:12PM (#59172298)

              The higher the price, the more visible the app.

              No. This is wrong.

              The higher the PROFIT, the more visible the app.

              Profit = (price) * (probability of sale)

              If you double the price, and sell 30% fewer, Apple's profit is (2*0.7) = 140% of what it was before, so higher visibility.

              If you double the price, and sell 60% fewer, Apple's profit is (2*0.4) = 80% of what it was before, so lower visibility.

            • Apple isn't in a position to evaluate quality when they have millions of different apps that are listed. It's just not possible for one entity to do all of it. Instead, let the market do it and let people vote with their wallets. If someone can get equivalent value from an app that costs $5 as from one that costs $10, they'll pay for the less expensive option. If enough people are buying a $10 app over a $5 one then there's probably some value it offers for consumers to make that choice.

              The only downside
              • I believe it costs 80/year to put an app in the app store. So they do have the resources. Voting won't protect the app store against malware. Bonzai buddy and weatherbug were both very popular.

      • My Stepfather owns a landscaping business, he sometimes complains about certain customers. I told him the same thing. Jack the prices up on your most pain in the ass customers, if they leave you win, if they stay you win.

        • This called "discouragement pricing", mostly meant to discourage customers from doing business with you, usually troublesome ones that are less profitable. In theory the discouragement price should represent the extra costs associated with taking their business.

          I work at a small SMB MSP and we have a category of customers who buy the least amount of services, often avoiding having us implement some technologies because they think they can do it themselves. Invariably they have problems and demand immediat

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dryriver ( 1010635 )
      Except that humans in developing countries do NOT earn 3,000 Dollars a month or more - actually a fraction of that - and yes, a productivity app suddenly going from 5 Dollars to 15 Dollars a month matters greatly to them. Your typical business in the developing world CANNOT afford to keep up with price increases like that, because the IT budget has to be kept small so that the business can profit at all. And what happens when 5 - > 15 a month turns into 15 - > 30 a month for an app you have become dep
      • You can actually charge different prices for users from different countries.
      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 )
        Look, another SJW who never took an economics class is telling the people that did what they should charge for the "shitty apps" they wrote! Sounds like you are conflating software development with charity -- so let me help you with science. An app, being in infinite supply thanks to its distribution model, is worth whatever someone will pay for it at a given point in time. As the price goes up, the demand goes down as people substitute for less expensive alternatives (and with most apps, there are plent
      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        Do people in developing countries actually pay for apps?
        In most developing countries, piracy and counterfeiting is rampant, with very little recourse from the rights holders.

        Often, developers make huge discounts for these countries. If anything just so that they end up with an official product rather than some dodgy stuff that hurt their image. Even letting therm know that piracy is not the only way is a win.

        In the west, there is some of that. Things may have changed but even though a lot of amateurs used P

    • by barc0001 ( 173002 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:15PM (#59171954)

      The thing that matters to me is that we're on this damn subscription treadmill at all. Buying software used to be a one-and-done purchase and then the license was yours. Now it's an annual fee for far too many things. For example, yes Office 365 is ONLY $79 a year, but it's every year. I *bought* a copy of Office 2007 for $200 back in 2006 and I still use it to this day because it does the job and it's paid for.

      If I didn't have that physical copy (ANOTHER thing that's becoming more scarce) then I'd either be shelling out annually or would have switched to Libre Office - which is OK as well, but there are still some annoying workflow differences. Plus, the SaaS model for software on your own machine constantly gets updates and things change without you expecting it, or some features just vanish. To be fair, some are added as well, but when something disappears on you when you least expect it and you need it, it's a pain in the ass big time.

      • Software takes a long time to write and produce, and incurs support costs after release in an always online world.

        Going to a SaaS release cycle provides a highly desireable predictable and stable income to budget for and budget against. $79 per year is probably more than what the software is worth given what people were paying previously, being it works out to everybody ugrading to the latest version at every release rather than a percentage running a specific release for a decade or more or $30 per year
        • SaaS software sucks. Constant buggy releases, ever changing UI, terrible documentation, expensive as fuck, poor support SEO, et al.

          When you can't charge more for support, you actually have to do a good job up front. SaaS is designed to produce crap so you string along users for support. No thanks.

        • > Software takes a long time to write and produce, and incurs support costs after release in an always online world.

          I've been working in software development since the early 90s, started in packaged software and currently work for the SaaS side of things. The SaaS product I work on is one of those that would be practically impossible to "package" to end users, as it's pretty much literally a real-time service. That's where SaaS makes sense, not on 99% of the software packages and apps out there.

          > Go

      • by Vrallis ( 33290 )

        Software I used to use at work ran something like $1200 originally, and upgrades (every couple years) were around $800. Then they switched to a subscription model--$2k a year. Once the new features of the subscription version were no longer as useful I just went back to my old version.

      • by dissy ( 172727 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @09:48PM (#59172654)

        If I didn't have that physical copy (ANOTHER thing that's becoming more scarce) then I'd either be shelling out annually or would have switched to Libre Office

        Just a heads up, the office 2007 activation servers are scheduled to be taken offline this December (2019)

        There are tools out there to let you backup your current activation files, if you don't have an HD image or similar for where you have it installed.
        But for new OS installs the physical copy alone won't be enough, without one of those "other" programs typically reserved for software one hasn't purchased and has a receipt for.

        If you have any files in an in between limbo state of compatibility needing both MS office and libre office to fully convert, it might be a good time.

      • The subscription treadmill is great for businesses who can move stuff to OpEx and not CapEx. It is great for businesses where people happily pay $10 a month for what was a $50 app previously. The people that get the short end of the stick are everyone else. To boot, if something happens in an economic downturn, you have to keep paying, or lose access to everything.

        What will make life very interesting is how businesses will fail when they can't afford to keep their cloud services going, and without access

        • > What will make life very interesting is how businesses will fail when they can't afford to keep their cloud services going, and without access to their data, they are just plain dead in the water.

          Absolutely a very interesting point. I have a lot of other problems with running things "on the cloud" you don't own as it is, this is another one I hadn't considered until now. For most businesses that are small, their cloud costs will be (relatively) small as well - for now. Fast forward 10-15 years thoug

    • Since they are talking business apps sure I fully agree with you. Though your comment on the individual human using the app that is makeing 3,000 a month or more, I'd point out in that category it could mean a lot different. A human making 3,000 a month is likely paying 1500 in rent/mortgage, 500+ in car payments etc... Bottom line is, after factoring in the must do to keep that 3,000+ a month coming in expenses (IE not having transportation, passing out from hunger, not being showered or well rested etc...
      • My household brings in over 10k a month and we still have to be careful where it goes.

        Education is expensive, for a lonnnnnggg time.

    • Or Java licenses.

    • We use some software that is ~$500/month/seat and when compared to someone’s $6,000 gross margin, it is a huge deal. For reference, it used to be $85/month. If that software practically did the work we were paid to do it is one thing, but it is just drafting. Add in the other software they need for their job, and it is over 15% of gross margin.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Yes, because when your electric bill goes up that much, as does your phone bill, your TV bill, your water bill, your [insert things you use here] bill, you end up with significantly less money each month.

      Same applies to software. We don't use just one piece of software. We use many various apps. It's no the individual cost that matters. It's the cumulative one.

    • These costs are not significant. Does it really matter if your $5/mth fee went to $15/mth

      Yes increased prices only matter if you add them all up. So don't add them up and just feel happy.

    • That's exactly it. It matters but there's both a switching cost and you have to consider the next best alternative. If the next best alternative to your 15/mth solution is one for $10 but you have to spend a week training everyone, and have an employee spend a month transferring data from one system to another ... Also, what other IT/business process changes will the time spent changing to a cheaper solution interfere with? At some point the boss will just say "I'll pay the extra $5/per to not have to worry

  • Self inflicted. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:00PM (#59171922)
    They sold you on the idea of "software as a service". You fell for it. Well, pay your rent, morons. They will keep putting it up until people stop paying it.
    • Re:Self inflicted. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dryriver ( 1010635 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:22PM (#59171968)
      What I am concerned about is SAAS being extended to the actual OS on your computer - pay your rent, or your PC/Mac can't run at all. This will be followed by HAAS, where you don't OWN your computer or electronics anymore - you pay rent to USE your electronics. You may think "yeah right, as if that will ever happen". People who are DUMB enough to go along with SAAS are also DUMB enough to go along with HAAS. Watch what happens around 2022 or so. You'll start to see the first offers for RENTING various computing and electronics devices. And people WILL GO ALONG WITH IT. The whole point of STEAM/ORIGIN/UPLAY services was to BRAINWASH an entire generation of youts into thinking "you can't actually OWN games". Those were Trojan Horses for SAAS, then HAAS after it. Science Fiction got it right - the future is all about exploitation.
      • You can't predict HaaS because it has been a thing for a long time ... well before cloud computing. Also, software always runs on hardware so all SaaS is S/Haas. Anybody who buys storage or a website hosting package also is purchasing HaaS as part of the bundle. In the end this whole article is comparing apples and oranges since cost of SaaS is not the same as cost of software. Comparing the cost of Office 201x with 365 doesn't fly because 201x didn't come with hardware and electricity to run it.
      • Actually, HaaS was already here. Remember IBM in the 1960s and 70s? You think you owned those computers?

      • Coming sooner than that. Game streaming is HaaS, you still need a client to play the game but that can be almost any device (which you’ll probably own); the heavy lifting is done by a gaming rig that you effectively rent for the duration of your session. If they want to be dicks about it like most cable companies here they could also make you rent their client equipment, but for game streaming that might be more trouble than it’s worth, any crappy PC, Apple TV or android TV device would do.
      • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

        That reminds me of one of Philip K Dick’s novels: Ubik.
        It wasn't the premise to the plot, but he (Dick) casually paints a setting in which everything had to be financially compensated to function. The protagonist of story begins so down on his luck, that when he is approached for a job offer by a female corporate exec, she literally has to slide coins under the door so that he can open the door to let her in.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      They were forced to do it. Adobe just stopped making buyable versions of Photoshop and After Effects and all the rest, so you want want any version made in the last 5+ years you have to rent.

      A lot of software just moved online. Can't use last year's accounting software because it's all out of date now, and web is the only choice they offer any more.

      A lot of development tools are going that way as well. Want to use parts made in the last decade? You have to rent the IDE.

      They aren't stupid, they know they hav

      • How did they get the older offline versions to stop working?

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by jezwel ( 2451108 )

          How did they get the older offline versions to stop working?

          By not issuing security updates. Eventually risk mitigation overcomes the upgrade / subscription cost.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          They made the new version file formats incompatible with the older versions. Professionals and businesses will need to open documents made in newer versions, and are thus forced to upgrade.

  • by dryriver ( 1010635 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:04PM (#59171930)
    I loved everything computing related in the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s. There was a constant sense of progress, of innovation, of clever things getting cleverer every year. There was a sense that the people building cool computing tech CARED about delivering something OBJECTIVELY GOOD. The last DECADE has destroyed that "I love computing" feeling in me - in my field, 3D graphics, innovation has virtually stopped. The suits who run the show are basically doing what Commodore did with the Amiga - not investing a penny in R&D or innovation, throwing the rest into obnoxious marketing, and trying to sell you the same ageing shit over and over every year, with FORCED SAAS subscriptions thrown in to make things extra shitty. Innovation in the 3D field is currently running at about 10% of its speed in the early 2000s. Things are almost at standstill. The engineers, mathematicians, PhDs and coders are NOT running this show anymore. Its MBAs and marketing heads looking at profit/loss spreadsheets that are calling the shots. It is 100% a repeat of the Commodore Amiga story - Commodore had something amazing with the Amiga, then was suddenly run by shitheaded managers who stopped all technical innovation and basically tried to sell people the now ageing Amiga over and over each year. Commodore went bust in the end and took an entire OS and computing platform with it. Last month, the open-source Blender software released V 2.80 with a brand new, actually quite usable UI design, and now almost the ENTIRE 3D community is mulling switching over to Open Source from their commercial 3D apps. Autodesk, Adobe, Maxon and others are charging 2K - 4K per license of their zero-innovation 3D software, and not delivering anything exciting anymore. None of these companies - run by suits - actually care what they are delivering for thousands of Dollars per license. So TFA doesn't surprise me. Step 1) make people dependent on your product. Step 2) stop innovating. Step 3) raise the price in small increments each year. Profit.
    • Apartment complexes have been doing this for decades. Two bedroom apartment - $980/month. 4 years later $1180 a month. Can't afford it anymore? Then move out.

      • by godrik ( 1287354 )

        Two bedroom apartment - $980/month. 4 years later $1180 a month.

        In my local market, it is even worth than that. My apartment that was $720/month in 2013 became $1110/month in 2017. It wasn't even that good and it went up $100/month every year.

        Can't afford it anymore? Then move out.

        Done that. I ended up buying a house in a better neighborhood not farther from my work. The house is bigger and after factoring interest, taxes, utilities, loss of opportunity on the down payment and mortgage, insurances, and maintenance of the property, it is about the same price as the apartment I used to live in today. (Because

    • While I don't disagree with your general assessment, what killed the Amiga was that most of its software was aimed at the entry level model and that the very specific hardware meant that transition to newer models meant buying pretty much all your software again anyway, so why not move towards other architectures that are more resilient?

      • by Dogers ( 446369 )
        Eh? How so? They were all compatible with each other save for 1200/4000 with AGA..
        • Hell, quite a few things were not even compatible between KickRom 1.2 and 1.3, changing the firmware was already enough to break compatibility.

          Programming for the A500 was not unlike programming for a console. You had a pretty well defined hardware platform at your disposal, and most programs were written for this hardware platform. Which of course led to sloppy programming, timing delays with loops and hacks that were tailored to the specific chipset of the A500. Moving from A500 to, say, 2000 was already

          • All of my serious Amiga software worked fine on not just 1.3, but 2 as well. And 3, come to think of it. Only games were affected, because only games tried to be that tricky.

            • Unfortunately games were the market niche the Amiga had carved out for it, most machines sold were essentially glorified game consoles for their users.

      • What killed the Amiga was mismanagement. It had nothing to do with technical merit or the availability of software. You could get WordPerfect and lotus for amiga, plus there was a PC bridge card, they were perfectly viable for small offices. But the coffers were looted, and Dave wasn't permitted to design the system he wanted.

        • The Amiga had a 5-7 year gap on its rivals, with nothing even coming close to its graphics and sounds, barring machines like SGIs or Sun Workstations with crazy high price tags. Because the management was so bad, they didn't do much, if anything to improve, and rivals eventually made commodity sound cards and graphic cards which made the Amiga pointless.

          The Amiga had a lot of cool innovations. However, when the suits take the reigns of the companies, and engineers are replaced by MBAs who have no interest

    • Innovation in tech is no longer the goal, but rather, innovation in business or marketing strategy. Odd, how once MBAs flooded the leadership, engineering was sidelined. If the only tool you've got is a hammer...
    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      I generally agree with the assessment. Prior to the late 90s computing was an 'acceptable' market but largely dominated by those who *wanted* to do it, not so interesting to those looking to just make money without an inherent interest in the technology. The late 90s bubble and subsequent collapse both piqued the interest of gold-seekers less inherently interested and paved the way for that mindset to take hold of the market in the following years.

      Another problem in various markets is that we have been sp

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      Some of the larger software platforms have always been annual licensing. I am surprised to learn that studio software was not annually licensed the whole time. The bigger financial platforms were licensed annually. I remember in the late 90s watching AP having to wire a transaction for $30k because they forgot their license for JD Edwards was due.

  • by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:10PM (#59171940)

    I bought an actual copy of Office 2010 a long time ago. Every time I get a new computer, I move the license. There is zero new functionality in anything post Office 2010 that I actually need or care about. I'm very happy not paying an annual Microsoft Office tax each year.
    I'm stuck with paying Adobe an obscene amount of money each years for Adobe Acrobat Pro. I need to edit a PDF about 5 times a year. For 5 hours of use, I'm paying $200 a year - every year. Then Adobe loads massive numbers of crap-ware executables that I have to delete (Run "handle" by sysinternals. The crap Adobe has reading your open pdf file will scare you). I'm happy to pay Adobe $200 once and then use the program for a decade. PDFs aren't changing much year to year, and everything I need is simple.

    • It isn't that hard to code an open document format from scratch and have it not tied to Adobe or any other SAAS crapware maker. Perhaps an open source effort should begin to create a PDF-like format that is better than Adobe's and has many FOSS reader/editor apps for it. At the end of the day, PDF basically stores a page layout, fonts, vector graphics and text. If Desktop Publising Software in the home computer days managed to do pretty much the same, how difficult can it be for open source coders in 2019 t
      • An Open Document Format wouldn't be PDF. Besides, engineering a document format is only the first step. Adoption of the format for interoperability across the entire economic system is the critical element.
      • It's been tried. "tetex" was just such a language and format, and it has supported descendant "texlive.. There was very, very little market compared to the directly printer-supported Postscript and PDF. I know of _no one_ in modern computing who publishes any documents in TeX based formats rather than PDF or more web-based formats such as MarkDown and RST.

    • I'm stuck with paying Adobe an obscene amount of money each years for Adobe Acrobat Pro. I need to edit a PDF about 5 times a year. For 5 hours of use, I'm paying $200 a year - every year.

      More fool you. I use PDFElement on my Mac. I think that was a $99 "one and done" license.
      I don't rent software. Next major version of MacOS fatally breaks Apple's Aperture. I can either rent Lightroom, or not upgrade the OS (especially since the current version will still get minor/security updates)..
      I'm not going to upgrade the OS...

    • Foxit Phantom PDF? I think that costs less than Adobe.
      • I've been using Foxit for years, and it is as good as Acrobat for almost everything, with the exception being long forms, where it might just fall flat on its face.

        Similar with Affinity Photo and Photoshop. Affinity Photo does pretty much everything Photoshop does, and has a similar enough UI to help ease moving over to it.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @03:56PM (#59172036) Homepage

    It's not just the cost that's gone in the wrong direction, but so has usability. Seems that each new version makes the software package harder to use, either through the introduction of new bugs or by the brilliance of a "redesign". There are no UIX experts driving the ship of ANY software package that I've seen ( windows, apple included ), and it shows.

    I'd be more than willing for software to get more expensive if it's utility increased along with it, but that's simply not the case.

  • Stop renting your software. Renters generally pay more in the long run.

  • Still paying the same price I've paid since upgrading to Linux. All my software is free, as in free beer & as in freedom. And yes, it's the only OS I use for work.
    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Hey me too.

      Though I have paid some money for software in the past 10 years. A couple of Android apps that were worth the price; some were from FOSS advocates. Also some games that aren't FOSS. So maybe I spent $300 in the last 10 years. So not so crazy!

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday September 08, 2019 @05:25PM (#59172218)
    My rent goes up 4.5% every year but "inflation" is under 2%. Same for my healthcare expenses. The only thing that didn't go up 4.5% (besides a few things that went up 5 and 6% like dog food) is my kid's tuition and the only reason that didn't go up is that they have an agreement that it's locked at the price agreed on when she started. I still paid an extra $6k this year vs her freshman/sophomore years because of reasons.

    Just think, in a few short months she can go to work making somebody else rich while paying her student loans. God Bless America.
  • An increase from 9.99 to 12 bucks is easier to swallow than 700 to 1000 bucks
  • It's much easier to get any kind of software for free these days. From dev tools to games, things which cost money in the past can often be gotten for free, or have good free alternatives which didn't exist a decade ago (or existed in a rudimentary and not very user friendly manner).

  • For a software company, to satisfy their investors, they can either grow their market, grow their market share or milk the available customers more. Growing marketshare isn't easy theses days and having a revolutionary product that creates new markets isn't either. That leaves getting more from the current market share.

    62% increase over 10 year is an increase of about 5% per year. This is similar to other forms of investments like real estate.

    Seen from this perspective, the number is easy to explain. The CE

  • You are the only one worth a toss left at this site - you post actual tech news (imagine that). I'm guessing that things are lean if there are only three of you, but BeauHD and msmash can pretty much get bent. Their millennial nonsense has ruined the site, I doubt it will ever return to its former glory; these days I only read now on the days that you post. Such a shame. Before they sold out, which was perhaps before your time in charge, Slashdot was one of the finer pleasures on the tech web. The modern Va

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