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Businesses Programming Software The Almighty Buck

JetBrains Reconsiders Subscription Licensing Changes 51

craigtp writes: On 3rd September, JetBrains, maker of IDEs and other productivity software, announced big changes to the way they sell and license their software. The changes were not well received by certain members of their user base. Within a few days, JetBrains announced that they were listening to the user feedback and that they would reconsider their changes. Today, they've finally announced their revised licensing changes, and while the subscription model remains, some important concessions have been made. Once a user pays for a year's subscription, they'll receive a perpetual fallback license, so they can keep using the software even if the subscription lapses later. They're also providing an option for offline license keys, so the software can run without needing to phone home.
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JetBrains Reconsiders Subscription Licensing Changes

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  • tl;dr (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 18, 2015 @03:23PM (#50551209)

    1. We are moving forward with subscriptions with important adjustments.

    2. You will receive a perpetual fallback license once you pay for a year up front or 12 consecutive months.

    3. You will receive up to 40% discount for continuous subscription.

    4. You will be able to use the software without an Internet connection.

    5. Current customers with active or recently expired upgrade subscription get first two years of subscription for the price of one.

    6. We still recommend you take 10 minutes to read it all for the complete details.
     

    • by nadass ( 3963991 )
      A customer is now a referred to as a "subscriber" because JetBrains Sales/Marketing Dept wants to be hip... and this "subscriber" has the option to renew or not... and this "subscriber" has a perpetual (non-subscription) license. This is all fluff.

      In reality, it's business as usual with a single twist: an optional payment plan instead of a single up-front fee.

      PS: They want to change their Financial Revenue Recognition model in hopes of increasing their marketing metrics for customer engagement. They
  • by theArtificial ( 613980 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @03:24PM (#50551213)
    While I'm not thrilled about the license changes this is great news and how things are supposed to work. That said, Jetbrains makes excellent tools and I recommend them to all of my colleagues.
  • Eclipse is the worst. The only thing worse than eclipse is paying a license fee.

    I use Intellij at work and it is excellent, but man I can't see paying for it myself, I hate complicated licensing.
    • I've used an Eclipse variant called MyEclipse that solves the plugin hell. It's not the prettiest beast but it gets the job done, if you're stuck in Eclipse land it might be worth scoping out if you're disenchanted with Intellij.
  • Not sure what's the fuss is about.
  • by Phoenix Rising ( 28955 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @05:41PM (#50552243) Homepage

    Now if only Adobe would figure this out, I'd pay them for a CC subscription. As it is, I refuse to trust my business to Adobe's online model - I want a piece of software that works after I stop paying, not hundreds of useless files that are the life of my business.

  • I don't have the time right now so I'll look into it later but can't help but wonder about Android Studio. Right now I assume it will have no effect but..

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