Subject | Re: Paintshop and Corel |
From | Savageduck |
Date | 11/16/2013 19:49 (11/16/2013 10:49) |
Message-ID | <2013111610494361729-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | Mayayana |
Followups | MI (42m) > Savageduck |
MayayanaPerhaps, perhaps. That said I have my copy of CS6 and while I can certainly live with it now. Having a 12 month promotional "trial" of CC was tempting. I am already thinking in terms of buying an LR5 upgrade to run with CS6 as a form of insurance. So for now I will live with the Adobe ambiguity and make any decision to renew once their intent is a tad clearer.
| Personally the deal for 12 months is too good for any | Photoshop/Lightroom user to turn down. Whatever happens they will still | have their older copy of CS which qualifies them for the deal.
The whole point of such marketing is to get you hooked. They hope you won't be willing to go back to the old version after the deal is over. Meanwhile, if you found the added cost of $10/month worthwhile then you must already think the rental version is notably better than CS6, which implies that they can probably get away with a price increase at year's end, because you'll be loathe to return to CS6 by then.
It's like cable TV promos that promise "only $xx for 6 months" without telling you the real price. Anyone who's not prone to lying to themselves will find out what the real price actually is and decide whether they want the product at *that* price.Yup! However, the big difference for current CS owners is, we will still have our original tools, whereas the cable subscriber who drops service after the promotional period has nothing.
(Salesmen rarely cheat outright. They just help one to lie to oneself.)