I wasn't *****ing about the costs... the OP is... 50 bucks a month...
What triggered my response to you about that was you saying "the old way was costly". The new way to me is far more costly in the long run, then the new way. Unless you only look at one month at a time and don't consider the overall "lifetime" use you have for it.
Why would I consider myself lucky... if you're making money on your mainstay business software, it's the cost of doing business...
You had said that your software investment represents "well over 10gs". Even though what "well over" is a big variable, at least you have a lot of software to show for that investment, when I get well over 10Gs, it's with just the purchase of one software. That's why I said you should consider yourself lucky, you have more software to show for the "same" investment (just in the general terms of "well over 10gs")
I believe the OP is like many I have read in Letterville Bullboard through the years... some still run Windows 3.1 because they refuse to give greedy software companies a dime more after they spend 2000 bucks... IN 1993! At some point, you're gonna have to pay up buttercup...
I can't speak for the OP, that would be speculation on my part.
I can tell you from someone (myself) that used to pay
full price for each iteration of Adobe (I hated how they handled upgrade software back in the day, especially when migrating to a new computer), that I have always believed that a company that produced a good product should be compensated for that product (that's why I always contribute financially to open source projects that I use in my day to day business).
To this day, I still believe that. I just don't believe in shelling out money to a company that is going in the direction that I don't like. And I don't have to. There are a lot of different ways around the issue. And thankfully, I don't deal with outside proprietary file formats being sent to me, so I have that flexibility.
Shoot, I'm still able to run older programs on newer hardware (that Windows 98 VM is on a 2 yr old Lenovo Thinkstation with Xeon processor and ECC ram), so the cost of even trying to maintain outdated hardware doesn't even fall into the picture.
All my old software is stored on my server, extracted from the original storage medium, although in that case, it was good that my son's computer still had a floppy drive (but current 16.04 XFCE based OS).
And yeah... the subscription method is more expensive...
And the problem that I have mainly is that that is
not how it's be represented by those vendors. There are alot of different ways that one can argue for subscription model that I could actually buy into. But vendors try to focus on the "cheaper" aspect of it and that may not be the case. Again, it depends on the situation, but that may not always be the case. It certainly wasn't in mine.