I still have CasMate 6.0 & 6.52 running on my laptop with XP. I still prefer it over flexi for the small amount of stuff that I need to do. We use Flexi at the main work stations but as long as my 6.0 will fire up that is where I go. It has been so long ago I don't recall what we did to get it running on the xp. it was real quirky at 1st. I do know I no longer have to use my dongle on the back of it
You have a notebook that is running XP? That's interesting. My personal notebook is a system that's still running decent; it originally came with Win 7 Ultimate but I updated it to Win 10 Pro. But after 8.5 years it's pretty much overdue for a replacement given the performance demands of certain new applications.
That's really nice not to have to use a dongle. We had parallel port based dongles for CASmate and EnRoute way back in the day. I'm not sure if anyone can buy a new computer with a LPT1 connection on it anymore (after market PCI boards are still available though). SAi eventually got rid of the dongle nonsense. We still have one application that requires a USB dongle unfortunately (Onyx Thrive).
laserfred said:
Now that Coreldraw is going with yearly subscriptions instead of license purchase, It's gonna be expensive. Same price as upgrading Corel every year, which is not our case.
We CorelDRAW users have a difficult choice to make between
3 options.
One: sign up now for $300 up front to get in on their
"upgrade protection" program for perpetual license owners at $99 per year.
Two: wait around and let one's perpetual license go "dead" and then pay $198 per year for a CorelDRAW subscription if you get in a position of needing to upgrade.
Three: just keep using the version of CorelDRAW you own
and never buy anything from Corel again.
I have a funny feeling a whole lot of Corel users are going to choose the third option, staying put with whatever version of CorelDRAW they already own. There is a possibility sales of CorelDRAW could really plummet. That could force Corel to back-track on the whole subscription thing. The giant private equity company KKR acquired Corel for $1 billion from Vector Capital. There's no telling what KKR might do with Corel if sales revenue craters. They could reverse the policy change, or they could dismantle Corel, selling it off piece by piece to other software vendors.
CorelDRAW 2019 was a buggy and controversial release. Apparently things still aren't at 100% even after a 3rd update. That certainly helps slam the brakes for anyone moving toward buying the 2019 upgrade (and upgrade protection) while it's still available. It's the main reason why I still haven't pulled the trigger on it. I use version 2018 at work and have a personal X8 license at home. I thought the deadline date for perpetual license owners to upgrade was December 1. We're two weeks past that and Corel is still sending out email offers daily and hitting users with "upgrades are ending" popup in the lower right corner of the computer screen. That seems like a hint that the strategy of corralling CorelDRAW perpetual license owners into a $100-$200 per year subscription model isn't working out as well as planned.
d fleming said:
That and I have a huge corel clipart collection that I have been using for years. You never know what will be useful on any given day.
One funny thing is Corel's clip art collection would sometimes change significantly from one version to the next. CorelDRAW 8 (back in the 1990's) had a pretty good collection of military clip art licensed from One Mile Up. But most of that stuff disappeared in version 9.