Re: This is how I see the new Sonar Model (in laymen terms)
2015/01/20 14:00:32
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Another way of looking at it is that to get bug fixes or updates you have to own a legitimate copy of the software, but to make it easier for people who might find it difficult to get the money together to pay for it in one go (especially new purchasers who don't qualify for update pricing) Cakewalk are offering a credit-check free hire purchase scheme.
Which is a different model to Adobe's Creative Cloud where you are always paying rent. Oddly, Creative Cloud can actually work out better if you can write the cost off against tax, in the UK taxation system at least. I've had several arguments with them over the years whether e.g Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Light Room etc. are capital expenditure or, given the frequency of update, really akin to consumables which can be fully written off against tax.
They've yet to question my Creative Cloud subscription, which I offset against tax in full as a regular payment for services required to operate the business. The result is Creative Cloud actually costs me less than the outright purchase route.
Before anyone asks, no, I would not want Cakewalk to emulate the Creative Cloud model. Cake has a different market for a start. In fact I'd rather Adobe copied the Cakewalk model even tough it might cost ne a bit more.
Sonar Platinum 64bit, Windows 8.1 Pro 64bit, I7 3770K Ivybridge, 16GB Ram, Gigabyte Z77-D3H m/board,
ATI 7750 graphics+ 1GB RAM, 2xIntel 520 series 220GB SSDs, 1 TB Samsung F3 + 1 TB WD HDDs, Seasonic fanless 460W psu, RME Fireface UFX, Focusrite Octopre.
Assorted real synths, guitars, mandolins, diatonic accordions, percussion, fx and other stuff.