I agree with the posts above, I hope this never gets implemented as a mandatory move.
Same applies to subscriptions, the difference in fees one needs to pay with the subscription-only model is staggering, over 15 years you could almost save a small apartment even when talking about two seats. Yeah, AC is cool, but investing in real estate sounds much more fun, eh?
Jokes aside, I've seen this article the other day:
https://www.techradar.com/news/microsoft-drops-fresh-details-about-upcoming-windows-10-pc-as-a-servi...
Even the thought of "PC as a service" makes me somewhat sick: the SaaS (what about we call this Something as a Service from now on - maybe I misunderstood, it's not a service for you, as a user, but a service for the shareholders to make some money) model is the manifestation of pure greed in most cases (hello, dear letter A companies that we all used or need to use occasionally and other lovely corporations!), but outsourcing all your means of production to a third party proposes risks and introduces a level of dependency that is insane, it just creates such an asymmetric relationship that I wouldn't want to be in.
Virtualisation is important, there is no doubt in that, but I like and prefer the peace of mind that owning stuff means. Let it be the software or the workstation it's running on... The flexibility of scaling a business is also very important, providing options is extremely agreeable, no doubt in that. I think the current licensing model of AC is good - you can buy it for your core employees, but you have the option to rent further licenses for occasional use, completely reasonable. Problems arise in my opinion when your software which is not really a "service" rather a "tool" become service - adding a few GBs of proprietary cloud or linked services (in the form of a small UI) doesn't really justify moving the whole thing as a service.
I think I'm quite oldschool in this sense - renting-only software might be good for companies that also "rent" their people and run the company with Excel sheets only, that have high level of fluctuation, where downsizing is the norm when the projects run dry, but I prefer a world where I can just unplug the computer from the web and still keep working 100% - this world is sadly fading with each passing day. What happens if there is a disruption on the server side? Would the company be liable for missed deadlines? Would my clients be happy, that confidential information is not stored in containable hardware (aka. my machine) but "somewhere"? So many interesting, but unnecessary questions.
Maybe I'm just insecure because I've never experienced job security, all my professional experience is about fixed-time or project based contracts, where you are as disposable as the chair that you are sitting on right now, but please make me upgrade because the product is so awesome, not because I won't be open my intellectual property anymore - either because I don't own the software, or the hardware it's running on.
odv.hu | actively using: AC25-27 INT | Rhino6-8 | macOS @ apple silicon / win10 x64