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.
tl;dr (Score:5, Informative)
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new versions. continued support and updates. etc.
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So what exactly is the point of paying beyond year one?
With a subscription, you are entitled to newer versions of their products; the fall-back license is permission to continuously use that (possibly) outdated version indefinitely.
Re:tl;dr (Score:5, Informative)
The fallback license is for the version that was current when the subscription started So if when you bought the 12 month subscription, or 12 monthly subs are up, you will get a key to use the version that was current a year ago. So if it's January 2016 and XYX was at version 1.2, and they released 1.3...1.5, then in January 2017 (if you bought monthly, or Jan 2016 if you bough annual) you will get a key to use version 1.2. If 1.3 came out in March 2016, then in March 2017, you will get a key to use 1.3 as well. If January 2017 they release 2.0, well, you get a key for that in 2018. The permanent key is valid for the version that was released 12 months prior. This way if you want to use the version released in the past 12 months, you have to keep your sub. Or just pay up for a new 12 month sub.
That said, the changes are actually pretty decent. You still get permanent licenses, and you get long term discounts. And if they try to screw you, you're not stuck.
Have to admit, I'm pretty impressed with the changes. Not often you get a company that not only listened to feedback, but actually implements it in a customer-friendly way.
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They pretty much had to. From the comments section of their blog, it was pretty much 80/20 that people were going to dump their products if they switched to a subscription-only license. The only people who seemed to be for it were those who found it a lot cheaper [their 'toolbox' subscription, where you can use all their ide's is a lot cheaper than licensing all their apps separately].
I was going to dump it, but given the changes to their licensing scheme announced today, I'll probably stick with using th
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They pretty much had to. From the comments section of their blog, it was pretty much 80/20 that people were going to dump their products if they switched to a subscription-only license. The only people who seemed to be for it were those who found it a lot cheaper [their 'toolbox' subscription, where you can use all their ide's is a lot cheaper than licensing all their apps separately].
I was going to dump it, but given the changes to their licensing scheme announced today, I'll probably stick with using the RubyMine ide.
I am not sure what RubyMine is like, but certainly for me I would have had to stick with PHPStorm regardless as there is just nothing that compares to it that I have found that runs under Linux.
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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
How it's supposed to work (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:who the fuck is jet brains (Score:4, Informative)
Jetbrains makes a number of popular IDEs and related dev tools. IntelliJ (Java IDE), ReSharper (VS extension for inspection/refactoring), TeamCity (CI/build tool), etc. Their tools are pretty well known in certain segments of the development industry (Java, Python, .Net), and TeamCity is quite popular as a less painful alternative to tools like Bamboo.
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Define "own".
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You paid for it, it's yours forever, unless you sell it, which you can. This is ownership. This is also slightly improbable for a software resource, which is not exactly a concrete thing that can only exist in a concrete form. Hence the weird attempts to monetize it differently, which tends to make people extremely angry, although the money has to come from somewhere. Or we wind up with things like Linux, which is nice enough but not exactly world-class... but still might be a best bet. The crap Microsoft's
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If you own something, you can re-sell it so someone else entirely without the permission or knowledge of whoever sold it do you. If you can't do that, you don't own it.
Once again, the only thing worse than eclipse... (Score:1)
I use Intellij at work and it is excellent, but man I can't see paying for it myself, I hate complicated licensing.
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CE is gimped.
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PyCharm is still free... (Score:1)
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Freeware is not free software.
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No, it's gratis slaveware.
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The funny thing is, now they claim they can [with this new subscription model] work more on doing things like fixing bugs and improving performance, because before, they had to spend all their time adding big new features, otherwise nobody would re-up each year.
Sounds like good changes to me (Score:4, Insightful)
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.
Android Studio (Score:1)
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The cost is now an expense instead of a asset purchase. You can claim on it immediately instead of having to depreciate it over several years...
Uhhhmmm. Section 179 anyone? It has been acknowledged to apply to software for years now...
(For those who don't know, expense the first $175,000 instead of depreciating...)