Allow me to try to mitigate your confusion. What I meant was go for the package that integrates the most functional features with ease of use. Even if you don't know how to use these features or see no immediate use for them, one day you will. The operative phrase here is 'functional features'. Diddling with remote servers and doing a [gag] subscription in lieu of merely buying the thing are not functional features.
Actually that doesn't help.
In my experience, with the software that I get, you don't have a different tool set. Level 1 has the same tools as Level 3. The difference is the editing capabilities of the tools and the level of automation. Both of which can be worked around using level 1 depending on your knowledge level about machine production.
My confusion comes in for this instance, because in the majority of the other posts of yours that I can remember, you vilify automation on one hand, but in this instance, it appears like you are advocating it. As automation is a "functional feature", especially in the industry that I am in. Remember, I get paid the same rather it takes me 5 minutes or 5 hours to digitize a pattern. If I have to re-work a pattern for whatever reason, having the tool set with more editing capabilities and automation, helps get that done quickly. Considering edits in my industry are not charged (unless it results in a totally different pattern), that is also another edge towards automation.
I just have those two divergent thought processes of yours that I can't reconcile.
Unless you allow for exceptions (but then, doesn't that disprove the rule?)
The operative phrase here is 'functional features'. Diddling with remote servers and doing a [gag] subscription in lieu of merely buying the thing are not functional features.
I would disagree in certain instances. Take for instance, Netflix and Lynda.com. Both subscription based products. I like the fact that I don't have to download and install another piece of software or all those files to view their product. Messing with just the server through a web browser is a functional feature.
Email is the same way, rather your subscription is free (but with limits) or it's a paid subscription. If I know that I'm going to be away from my computer while a payment for a digitized pattern comes in, I go ahead and log in on the web to my email, save a draft of the email with the attached files. Say what I'm going to say, have the email all ready to go and just save it as a draft. When I get a notification on my phone on payment, I just send the email on my phone. Enabling me to have a quicker response time. I would say that messing with servers, is very much a functional feature, it just depends on the situation.
Now, having said all that, I do have a hard time advocating a subscription based service
as the only option for core programs like Ai, Corel, and/or Flexi. If they want to keep two options, that's one thing, because there are some that would rather have a subscription based route and that's up to them. But not as the sole option.