JetBrains Moving Its Dev Tools To Subscription Model 141
esarjeant writes: For many Java developers, IntelliJ has been our predominant IDE. JetBrains is looking to make their tools easier easier to buy and use by switching to a subscription program. Their plan is to have people pay a monthly/yearly fee for access to the tools instead of upgrading when they're ready. Fortunately, if your subscription lapses it looks like you'll have 30 days to check all your stuff in. How does NetBeans look now?
Many members of various developer communities are pushing back against this change: "For a developer with an unstable income, it might be perfectly fine to stay on an older version of the software until they've stashed enough cash to afford the upgrade. That will no longer work." JetBrains has acknowledged the feedback, and say they will act on it.
Rent seeking behavior (Score:4, Insightful)
This is just another example of greedy, rent-seeking behavior, trying to force users to pony up cash on a monthly basis forever and ever and ever...heaven forbid you ever get to actually own anything ever again.
Re:Rent seeking behavior (Score:5, Insightful)
This is really quite simple.
The people paying for the upgrades consider the changes improvements. The people who don't pay, don't.
Now you can understand why so many people were on Office 2003 for so long.
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Outside of slashdot I have not met anyone yet who has ever complained about the ribbon in many years.
It took me a week to end the frustation and get the hang of things. A month later I was proficient and prefer it and the change previews over the hiddeous nested menus of 2003 any day. Now I curse and pull my hair out when I got to 2003 workstation
Want to see something cool? Hit the alt key in office? If you are on a laptop with limited space like a starbucks or airplane you do not need a mouse. Just hit the
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I got used to the ribbon in a matter of days, but having quite literally NO other software using it, it still means that switching to MS Office applications requires a larger mental "context switch" than switching between pretty much any other 2 applications.
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Now you can understand why so many people were on Office 2003 for so long.
Were?
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Just put the price up then, virtualy everybody has said so, people just dont want to pay a subscription.
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For what it's worth, they have since stated that they are listening [jetbrains.com].
I think you are incorrect by implying that nobody wants a subscription model, just as it is wrong to assume that everyone wants it. Many subscriptions are worth it so long as you plan to upgrade every release, and sometimes even if you don't. They tend to come with perks like support and cloud management.
But, I think that companies who offer subscriptions should offer both, and let the customer decide. And I think you should have a perpe
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How about paying for the improvements *when* they are made, rather than paying perpetually for implied improvements that may or may not benefit you at all?
Re: Rent seeking behavior (Score:5, Insightful)
People do pay for improvements. You come out with an improved product and I'll buy it--if I want to.
These rent seekers want you to pay whether there are improvements or not, and this may come as a shocl, but some people don't like that.
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Pity, IntelliJ was on my list of considerations. Now I am rethinking that prospect.
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I worked for a print shop (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, it's rent seeking, but I don't really see an alternative for a company that makes utility software. It's damned hard to get people to pay for it...
Re:I worked for a print shop (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it hard to believe a software company with the talent to make software so robust and well written that it never needs updates couldn't come up with another blockbuster product to continue making money.
Also, if the product never requires updates, wouldn't that mean that if you're paying a subscription fee you're basically flushing money down the toilet? The money's not being used to fund new versions of the software, you're just paying the developer for something you already own for eternity.
It's harder than you think (Score:3)
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So instead you deserve to make money forever on the one product? That's just as fucked up as copyright, where both you AND your children simply must be paid for a work. Otherwise, there's no point in creating it.
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So instead you deserve to make money forever on the one product?
Uh. Yes?
If you don't like it, you're free to make an equivalent, competing product and sell it outright or give it away. If the terms of the agreement don't fit your business model or preference, you can choose not to use the product.
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Well, it seems a bunch of people are just fine with dropping your product. Just like I plan on not re-upping with JetBrains when my support term expires next year.
Re: It's harder than you think (Score:2)
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I've found that the smaller the niche market, the smaller the developer, down to the point where some niches it's like a guy who used to work in that line of business who wrote some software for it where none existed and found it more lucrative to sell it than to stay in the business.
There's always the chance "the guy" was in his 40s when the ball started rolling, he had near zero overhead and made enough where he could retire early. Thus, no need to come out with a new product or make the dialog boxes rou
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as a happy user of their other product - pycharm, i don't understand the concept of not needing updates in an IDE. at least in python, i expect the IDE to understand the new features in latest versions of python. so normally, i'd expect software updates every time there's a new language version.
could someone explain to me why updates might not be needed for a java ide?
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That is not necessarily bad for corporate customers and myself with Office 365.
Office 365 I pay $99 a year. I have office on 3 systems and my Android phone. I also get 1 TB of cloud storage with OneDrive as well. I get all the newest versions and fixes like MS is adding colors back and more touch oriented features for my surface pro and Android for free. My $99 is because I also have Access. My exwife was in big trouble last year with no work and needed to go back to school to get recertified and didn't ha
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It's rent seeking if you expect to make some capital, sit on it, and appoint yourself local land baron to collect rents without actually performing further work.
For a lot of us, this goes against basic work ethic and social contract assumptions. We think you should be compensated for new work/value you produce and stop being compensated as soon as your work stops, just like it goes for the rest of us. It's an unfortunate side effect of capitalism that capital seems to move beyond being a temporary store of
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It's rent seeking if you expect to make some capital, sit on it, and appoint yourself local land baron to collect rents without actually performing further work.
For a lot of us, this goes against basic work ethic and social contract assumptions. We think you should be compensated for new work/value you produce and stop being compensated as soon as your work stops, just like it goes for the rest of us. It's an unfortunate side effect of capitalism that capital seems to move beyond being a temporary store of value and turns into a permanent lever to exploit all who come later.
Capitalism is all about accumulating capital, it's not some unfortunate side effect.
Unless you tax surpluses at 100%, I don't see how you can stop companies piling up capital.
Oh, and your "basic work ethic" idea is cute.
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Well, its not just Java Devs. Xamarin and Appmethod are also doing this subscription model. That covers all major RAD tool languages.
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If you think Eclipse is bad you haven't seen bad.
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And what if you DON'T think Eclipse is bad? What if you consider it to be pretty wonderful? Hmmm?
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That you have a pretty low bar for "wonderful"?
Re:Not going to work out for them (Score:5, Interesting)
The hate for Eclipse is so terribly outdated.
I haven't heard anyone come up with one single proper argument against Eclipse that stands today. Any dev worth his salt has an SSD, plenty of memory and a half-decent CPU. In addition to that, Eclipse has come a long way, which make the "It's slow as hell!"-thing quite outdated.
Even if it would be marginally worse than other IDEs, it has some great advantages:
1. Multi-language, hell, multi-purpose even.
2. Cross-platform
3. Free
4. Open source
5. Designed to be extended with plugins and as such, a veritable buttload of them exist.
6. Generally consistent interface
I've used it (professionally) for editing and debugging PHP, Twig, HTML, XML, YAML, CSS, Android, Java, C, Shell scripts and Javascript code residing in CVS, SVN, Git repos (and even via FTP - shudder) in the past decade and in general being able to use the same hotkeys and UI elements to perform similar tasks. I will readily admit that the different languages have varying levels of support for the more advanced features, but on the whole it easily beats other multi-language tools and saves me from having to use and become proficient in the use of a multitude of language specific editors.
It's probably not the best example, but due to the lack of plugins for Objective C in Eclipse I've been forced to use XCode for iOS development: Talking about donkey shit..
Anyway, I am genuinely interested in which features/properties for any of the above-mentioned languages are lacking in Eclipse and make it worth switching to another IDE for that language.
I can has org.eclipse.m2e.logback.feature? (Score:2, Troll)
Anyway, I am genuinely interested in which features/properties for any of the above-mentioned languages are lacking in Eclipse and make it worth switching to another IDE for that language.
Here's the Eclipse Experience.
1) Go to their website.
2) Click on download.
3) Spend the next 20 minutes trying to understand which of the 14 editions you need *
4) Give up and download Netbeans.
* bonus round: click on one of the edition then look at the "Detailed features list", and be amazed to see... a list of java namespaces. Very convenient.
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This I agree with (but it's hardly a basis on which to choose an IDE).
Considering that Eclipse is built around the concept of plugins, the whole 'editions' download page never made sense to me. The only difference between the editions is that they include certain plugins by default (and as such, it doesn't really matter all that much which one you select). The fact that there isn't a basic edition makes it extra silly.
Much better would be to have such an edition as the basis and allow you to tick some check
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20 minutes? You could just pick the one with the most downloads. The top 2, by far, are the Java and Java EE ones. Except for the one "promoted" edition, they are all sorted by popularity.
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So, it sounds like you are saying that you love Eclipse for what you are doing and you want people to try and convince you otherwise. Why?
If it works for you, that's great, but this approach you seem to be taking that anyone who doesn't like Eclipse is, "outdated", or a moron because you've never had that problem before is just petty and ridiculous. You've obviously been using Eclipse for a long time and have it set up in a way that works for you. Good for you.
For folks who are new to Eclipse, like me, I ha
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So, it sounds like you are saying that you love Eclipse for what you are doing and you want people to try and convince you otherwise. Why?
Well, I firmly believe in the power of advanced IDEs and I am always looking for new features that enhance my productivity. I've seen the Netbeans vs IntelliJ vs Eclipse (vs vim) debates many a time here on Slashdot and apparently IntelliJ is 'infinite times better than Eclipse' (which is 'donkey shit'). Taking such comments at face value, I would be an idiot if I wouldn't switch to IntelliJ, right?
The thing is that I just don't see it. I don't see the mountainous advantages of IntelliJ or disadvantages of
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Outdated was your word not mine.
The way you blithely dismiss anyone's "anecdote" on how Eclipse was an epic fail for them makes it quite clear you think they are a moron. I don't have time to go back through your posts to pick out everywhere you blame flaws of Eclipse on operator error.
The button was "stop debugger". Every time I started Eclipse the UI state was as if the app was running in the debugger. Bizarre to be sure.
All I know is that one IDE let me get my work done and the other was a constant batt
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Outdated was your word not mine.
Note that a sentence is commonly made up of multiple words. You turned my qualification of a sentiment into a sweeping ad hominem and then attacked that ad hominem.
My version: "The hate for Eclipse is so terribly outdated"
Your version: 'anyone who doesn't like Eclipse is, "outdated"'
See what you did there?
Asshole.
The way you blithely dismiss anyone's "anecdote" on how Eclipse was an epic fail for them makes it quite clear you think they are a moron
Like I said, citation needed. You are imagining things. I haven't blithely dismissed shit and furthermore have no problem calling people morons when I feel it is warranted. Let me reiterate that I
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- The UI doesn't scale properly in my KDE environment courtesy of SWT (both NetBeans and IntteliJ do)
This seems to be limited to KDE in certain situations
The profiler is as close to unusable as possible
How so?
- It just consumes CPU for no good reason (as does IntelliJ). Working on an aeroplane flying across continents it's the difference between actually getting some work done and running out of juice after one hour.
I'm not sure 'developing software on an airplane' is a use case to optimize for. Having said that, needless CPU usage is obviously not a plus. Then again: CPU cycles on a dev machine or generally cheap. I'm pretty sure no dev on any semi-modern machine (my CPU is 6 years old) even notices Eclipse CPU usage.
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1. You need 10 copies of eclipse for each configuration because plugins rarely work together.
Never had that problem, and my install is chock full of plugins.
2. It took 20 minutes to index source changes. It never figured out I just wrote a method and could auto suggest it in a reasonable time.
It used to do that on an HDD, yes. That's why I mentioned having an SSD. I'm not sure whether that is still a problem, as I haven't used Eclipse with an HDD for 6+ years.
3. It's not user friendly.
A very well supported statement.
4. It doesn't run on other operating systems well because it wasn't pure swing.
'Other' operating systems?
AFAIK, it generally runs fine on Linux (barring high-DPI KDE environments) and OSX.
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> 3. It's not user friendly.
> A very well supported statement.
I for one would like all my Desktop apps to have an Eclipse style UI. Its very flexible to layout, as you see fit. I first tried Eclipse in 2002. I picked it up instantly and had no confusion about anything (had used several other Java IDEs before).
> 4. It doesn't run on other operating systems well because it wasn't pure swing.
> 'Other' operating systems?
> AFAIK, it generally runs fine on Linux (barring high-DPI KDE environments)
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I for one would like all my Desktop apps to have an Eclipse style UI. Its very flexible to layout, as you see fit. I first tried Eclipse in 2002
Yes, exactly. I bought a 3840x2160 monitor a while back and it is absolutely fantastic to be able to use that screen estate exactly as I want. A dedicated little corner for this, a little corner for that. It's just great. My most recent bit of perspective design is having the task list always visible and displaying the open TODOs in the currently edited file, which makes me aware of which open ends coincide with what I am editing the file for at that point.
Its also one of the reasons why I love Foobar2000 s
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Eclipse is indeed still a slow piece of shit, even with an i7 & 16GB. But I suppose you'll claim that frequent processing lag that allows me to type faster than the system can render the characters or the editors taking several seconds to open and process text files are not a "valid complaints".
Sounds bad and that would be a valid reason to dislike Eclipse. As I said to a sibling AC, I haven't used Eclipse with an HDD for 6+ years, so maybe Eclipse is still shit on an HDD.
If you do use an SSD, it would seem to me that there is something wrong with your install. It definitely sounds like something that shouldn't be happening, because it sounds unworkable.
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Your post seems to be lacking in the 'proper arguments'-department.
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I didn't say it was necessary to buy faster hardware. I just said that the "it's slow as hell"-argument doesn't really stand today.
You can call it 'heavy' or 'badly optimized', but not 'slow' anymore.
I'm not sure 'badly optimized' is even warranted still. As I said, Eclipse has come a long way and some things just intrinsically require a lot of processing. I sortof want to try running it from and with code on an HDD to see if it is still significantly slower than the alternatives on those. OTOH, if you're d
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IntelliJ is one of those free IDEs. There is an open source version. And the open source / community version is vastly superior to any of the other free java IDEs.
Never been a fan (Score:2)
I have used it once on a contract and was not impressed with its functionality. There wasn't much difference from other IDEs and most of them are free.
Hmmm, pay for something or use a free one?
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm kinda in the same boat. I've had subs for PyCharm and WebStorm both personally and through work for years. I don't think I'm gonna renew them when they expire. I'm finding more and more that the free alternatives are just as good now.
Latest problem: PyQt on Windows. There's no intellisense in PyCharm using the binary install of PyQt. Getting it working, as far as I can gather, requires grabbing the library's source, finding everything I need to build the source in VC2010 and then (hopefully) it works. I
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> and the clusterfuck that was Eclipse
I never got this rage against Eclipse. Its a FOSS product. For a FOSS product, it provides a level of polish that goes well beyond the standards of a typical FOSS. It is one of the most complex projects out there. The standard distributions of Eclipse work quite well, out-of-the-box. Now, it has a very large ecosystem of complex plugins - at a level that is unmatched by other IDEs. Like with Firefox, some of these plugins do bog down Eclipse. But that's hardly the fa
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They are claiming that with this new model, they won't have the constant pressure to come up with fancy new features each year to make you re-up your support agreement, so they will actually work on fixing bugs and releasing features that have fewer bugs as they are completed.
Somehow, I doubt it, as the subscription model removes any real impetus to advance the application, just to make sure it keeps running with minimal improvements.
Goodbye JetBrains (Score:1)
Good point, Weak argument (Score:5, Interesting)
Just to be clear, "stashing enough cash for to afford the upgrade" means setting aside $100 for the year.
If you have to "stash cash" to afford the upgrade chances are you should save your money; you can get by with Eclipse. I don't approve of the new pricing model, but the "I can no longer afford to be a developer" argument doesn't work. The new model is actually cheaper per year for anyone who always renews their license.
Personally, I prefer to purchase something and be done with it. If I want the upgrade I can purchase that outright as well. If I don't then I think I should be able to continue using what I have already paid for.
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if you are looking at $100 per year that might seem like a large one time purchase
Wait, is this Slashdot Bangladesh? What's next, a thread about pissing in a bucket to save money on the water bill?
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Office 365 is great for me.
MS does sell the regular version of Office too you know. I need MS Access. For $99 a year I have Office on 4 devices with Access including my phone and my exwife in California when she needed a real version of Office and was broke. Their 365 includes free new updates like 2015 when it comes out and 1 TB of Onedrive storage and file synchronization across all my devices. They automatically show up in recent documents.
It is an excellent value as this would cost more than $2000 easil
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Their 365 includes free new updates like 2015 when it comes out and 1 TB of Onedrive storage and file synchronization across all my devices.
That's the thing, i don't need those upgrades, and paying monthly is insane. I've had the same version of Office for what is it now 8+ years? I've never had a need to upgrade, the software i purchased works just fine. Not everyone needs bleeding edge, most of the time bleeding edge in software isn't that big of an improvement.
It is an excellent value as this would cost more than $2000 easily for the professional version on each device ... oh oops I upgraded the motherboard and install got de-actived :-( ... no problem I will just enable it on new computer take it off old one etc.
Done correctly it can benefit the consumer as well. Adobe ... not so much
That's a problem with the new DRM. I have an older version Microsoft Office installed on about 7 computers, more if you count upgrades and past computers. It's this new trend where com
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Adobe sucks and is a monopoly. After buying Aldus and anyone who made video editing they are trying to milk the cow for all its worth. Also they try to make each function into a seperate product to get more money. So it is like MS splitting up word into 3 different programs. One for editing. One proofing. One for clip art etc. Then they have the freaking audacity to charge you full price each year??
Don't view opinions on subscriptions by Adobe who suck.
I pay $90 a year and could go much cheaper with 3 devic
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Netbeans is looking just fine (Score:4, Insightful)
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As a long-time Eclipse user, I moved to NetBeans for just short of two years before the delay when starting an application and the very flaky dependency building (when multiple projects are included in the final application) drove me over the edge and back to Eclipse.
In Eclipse you hit "debug" and it starts debugging the application. I
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I assume that there is some type of application for which NetBeans is as good as (or better than) Eclipse - that application is NOT desktop/standalone Java application.
As someone that maintains a java-based emulator for several years I couldn't disagree more with that.
As a long-time Eclipse user, I moved to NetBeans for just short of two years before the delay when starting an application and the very flaky dependency building (when multiple projects are included in the final application) drove me over the edge and back to Eclipse. In Eclipse you hit "debug" and it starts debugging the application. In NetBeans you hit "debug" and it starts to compile. Change code in Eclipse, hit save, and quite often the application continues with the new code. In NetBeans the on-the-fly debug changes are unreliable and slow (another compile cycle).
Then you are doing it wrong, dude. You should make sure to check "Generate debugging info" under the compile settings for the project, which eliminates the need for the IDE to do it on-demand later. You can connect the debugger to a running instance by clicking "Attach debugger" as long as the process has JPDA enabled already. I do it all the time when I do J2EE or Sling-based dev work since the app serve
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NetBeans does not do either of these well
Remote debugging is always very cool, but it's a little frustrating in that when you finally finish a session with Eclipse, including hot-swapping code on the fly - you then have to actually comp
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No shit. If you consider that Netbeans has even a single feature, its feature to cost ratio is infinite. Nothing could ever beat that. And even if something else costs only one dollar and it has a billion features, its feature to cost ratio is negligible in comparison.
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Thanks for the math lecture, but I think to most people it's obvious that the point here is that the value of extra features in JetBrains versus what you can get in Netbeans is not worth the price they ask.
Hello Bitrot (Score:1)
This is a huge negative for me. As well as being a Java developer I am a photographer who uses Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom in my work. I HAVE NOT UPGRADED EITHER SINCE ADOBE MOVED TO THE SUBSCRIPTION MODEL. If I have a tool that I use for my work I want to own it. I don't ever want to lose access to that tool for any reason. If I have a project built in Idea and 10 years from now the world has moved on, Idea is no longer the tool of choice, and my "subscription" is lapsed because it's not used any more; I
Re:Hello Bitrot (Score:4, Insightful)
You know that Lightroom is still available for sale, right?
When Adobe announced the "Creative Cloud" nonsense, I bought a copy of CS6, upgrading from CS3, knowing that if I didn't act, I would never be able to do so again. At that point, I immediately began phasing out my use of Photoshop. Unfortunately, I haven't created any big new projects since then, and I'm stuck using Photoshop for existing projects because Pixelmator doesn't handle manual text kerning changes correctly on import. But the cover art for my fourth novel will be done entirely in Pixelmator.
You see, Photoshop hasn't added anything I really care about since they added layers and layer effects. There are a few minor enhancements that are nice to have, but I was happy on Photoshop 7. I buy upgrades to Photoshop whenever an OS X upgrade breaks it badly enough. It annoyed me badly enough paying for bug fixes when I was doing it on my own terms. When Adobe tried to push me to a monthly fee schedule for Photoshop, I walked away and haven't looked back.
I still buy Lightroom about every second release (about $40 annually), because unlike Photoshop, its upgrades actually provide tangible benefits—new camera support, face recognition, etc. (Yeah, theoretically Photoshop upgrades technically add new camera support, too, but I've imported RAW files into Photoshop a total of three or four times ever; typically, I start out with the processed output from Lightroom.) The problem with Photoshop is that it is a mature product, and there aren't any cool new features left to add that provide enough benefit to pony up an extra $80 a year to get them.
That's a serious problem for companies like Adobe. You see, they're in a position where they command the market. The only place to go from there is down, and the writing is on the wall. Flash is a failure. Photoshop is rapidly seeing the bottom portion of its market worn away by competition. This leaves Adobe's last remaining market—big graphics shops. Those folks will keep buying Photoshop until they no longer find themselves exchanging Photoshop files with other companies. Adobe is thus bleeding those companies for every possible penny they can before Photoshop eventually fades into obsolescence. Or at least that's what it looks like from where I'm standing.
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That's why you just don't build an empire around a small number of products.
Adobe has to be competitive and spend money developing and promoting new products? Boo hoo..
Easy Solution - Offer Both Models... (Score:1)
There's an easy solution to this problem - just offer both pricing models and let the consumer choose.
E.g. you can buy a perpetual license to a specific version of Intellij for $X, or you can buy the subscription model for $Y / year (which is not tied to a specific version). At that point, its the consumer's choice.
I feel like people have knee jerked a bit much of this. I like the idea of owning my version of Intellij (have been using it since 2002'ish), but I tend to avoid buying every single version (I
I can live with this... (Score:3)
I'm self-employed and the price of IntelliJ is the equivalent of about 30 minutes of my time. I write algorithms for several companies, in multiple languages, and have been quite happy with IntelliJ. Your mileage may vary...
That said, perhaps Eclipse would do everything I need, but there is a cost of changing - I'd be spending some time scanning websites to figure out how to do what I want to do.
A.
Re: I can live with this... (Score:2, Insightful)
You're doing pretty well if you earn $398 per hour.
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That is one thing thats cracking me up.
People freaking out over Photoshop's price is one thing. It's almost (not really) a monopoly, and many professions that require it aren't paid very well. Many of those professions also live or die by their skill in using Photoshop.
The tools Jetbrains make however, are almost all tied with highly paid professions with near zero unemployment rate. They also have a shitload of free alternatives.
A lot of people at work mentionned how "holy shit so expensive would never pay
Desperate (Score:1)
But...
I fucking hate the subscription model.
Maybe it's time to try coderush or something.
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Resharper is very popular, but Jetbrain's flagship is IntelliJ along with the other language specific IDEs. With Eclipse annoying people more and more, you see these more often.
The main reason behind this change is probably a combination of wanting less spiky income, along with how all of these IDEs are basically useless without constantly being upgraded, because of how quickly things like JavaScript and open source dev tools change, so people either have to keep upgrading, or just stop using them. May as w
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Re:Put down the pitchforks people... (Score:4, Informative)
Only until November 1st, after which they will no longer sell perpetual licenses. If you want the latest and greatest, you must subscribe.
BTW, nice job knowing what you're talking about before ripping into TFS.
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No Incentive to Innovate (Score:2)
I purchased the last version of IntelliJ Idea and would upgrade if I see significant incentives in the product to do so. At the moment they seem to be throwing a lot of effort into releasing new products rather than working on existing products.
I can see an advantage for someone who wants the entire suite of products as long as new products are constantly added but not so much for someone who just wants Idea. With a subscription they have no incentive to make a product better as they have you hooked into
Updates are not always a good thing (Score:2)
For example, Adobe Premiere 2015, which is part of Adobe Creaative Cloud, is pretty much broken as it exists today. If you want it functional, you have to roll back to the 2014 version.
Subscription services suck because they already have your money, so they're in no hurry to fix their broken product. They'll get around to it eventually. Maybe.
Otherwise, a stand alone edition suffering the same problem would be critical fix numero uno or they don't get to sell any.
Another company going the same route is A
Wait until Windows 11 is subscription only (Score:2)
Well no more resharper then (Score:2)
When they go for this, it's bye bye new resharper.. I hate all these subscription models of late..
Welcome to SaaS (Score:1)
Netbeans for Java, PyCharm for Python (Score:1)
Is anyone else here using this combination?
I am a longtime Java programmer that has been using Netbeans since 3.x. Recently I have started doing Python projects and found the Python plug-in support for Netbeans 8.x very rudimentary. So I tried PyCharm and found it does what I want and ended up paying the $99 for the personal-pro edition. There are a number of things I don't like about PyCharm and it has a lot of rough edges for a paid-for product but I haven't found anything better yet.
When Netbeans
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although i don't deal with java at all, i do write a fair amount of python scripts to help me manage our infrastructure. i originally started with eclipse+pydev but moved to Komodo and then to pycharm. as a (primarily) network guy i require a lot of handholding from my IDE. i've found komodo a lot poorer at that than eclipse. then i discovered pycharm and haven't looked back. i haven't found anything (on gnu/linux) that comes even close to it. i'm interested in what you don't like about it. (apart from spee
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Reddit is like a lightning rod. They get all the crazies and lunatics jumping on the latest hysteria. Then when the matter is ready for polite, sophisticated discussion, it appears on Slashdot. In the past it was digg, now it's reddit. Same old same old.
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I'm black and sound black, and their racist support refuses to help.
It's a Czech company. Out there the non-Caucasian population is 0.5%, and most of that is Vietnamese.
So the problem is not that they are racist, it's just that when you say "cuz, this shit is whack and if y'all don't make it supafly I'm'a smoke yo dog" they probably don't understand the issue.
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I think you need to recalibrate your offend-o-meter.
Re: Maybe this will improve support.... (Score:1)
And sexist! When my boss called them they refused to help her. When I called, as a male-ish sounding female, they were helpful.
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I didn't find them to be racists. They were instead sexist. They refused to help any of the women on our team. Not only did they refuse, they were extremely rude about it. IntelliJ is simply too slow to use, and we were looking for help on what features we could disable so we could attempt to use it. Instead, we gave-up on IntelliJ and just counted the huge amount of money we gave JetBrains as a loss. It was a complete waste of money.