CentralSigns
New Member
I posed the upgrade question to a Adobe rep on a chat line in the sales site and he said nothing was going to change from the way things are now.
I posed the upgrade question to a Adobe rep on a chat line in the sales site and he said nothing was going to change from the way things are now.
Read my post above, it's a link to a blog on adobe's site by a Senior Vice President. He's the one that said it. It may not be policy down to the people that answer the phone, but it appears to be coming, according to their own SVP.
Why wouldn't they tell the Sales Reps and encourage more closed sales??
Always the last to know, and the last to have product knowledge implemented. They're probably not even in the same country.
Why wouldn't they tell the Sales Reps and encourage more closed sales??
Overall, the "Creative Cloud" thing is a giant rip off.
Has anyone here gone to Adobe's web site to see what the real prices are for creative suite subscriptions. They're freaking sky high.
The $49.99 per month for 1 year subscription price mentioned in the C|Net article about Scott Kelly's open letter applies only to Photoshop Extended. Prices are quite a bit higher for Adobe product suites.
Master Collection costs $129 per month for a 1 year commitment. For one year that is $1536. For 18 months (the typical term of an Adobe CS product cycle) that costs $2322. The full price for Master Collection if you're a first time buyer is $2599.
Design Premium costs $95 per month for one year, a total of $1140. That's more expensive than the price of upgrading an old CS2 or CS3 license to the latest CS5.5 Design Premium suite. 18 months times $95 is $1710. Full price for the suite is $1899.
...and when your subscription term is ended, you still don't own the software and can keep using it -- it stops working, right?
Whereas if you buy the software, you "own" it, and can keep using it as long as your computer holds out. It looks like buying the software is actually cheaper than renting it, no?
The only advantage I see in this for businesses is the monthly subscription plan may be a better tax write-off than a straight software purchase. The re-occurring monthly fee would be a constant overhead cost instead of something you had to depreciate.
does anyone see anything "fantastic" about CS5.5 in regard to printing signs/decals?
I see some more control over brushes and strokes and perspective drawing in illustrator, but I can't find anything beneficial to printers (aside from Indesign users) that justifies the upgrade. CS5.5 seems to focus on HTML5.5 and mobile device content.
does anyone see anything "fantastic" about CS5.5 in regard to printing signs/decals?
I see some more control over brushes and strokes and perspective drawing in illustrator, but I can't find anything beneficial to printers (aside from Indesign users) that justifies the upgrade. CS5.5 seems to focus on HTML5.5 and mobile device content.
If you're a printer you should always be at the latest version of Adobe CS, full stop. Annoying customers by making them save down is how you lose customers. Print is way too competitive to risk hassling people over something like that.