Sunset Clauses in Software
DaveAtFraud writes: "Ed Foster over at InfoWorld
has an interesting column on "sunset" clauses in commercial software. I don't have a problem with people who write, say, anti-virus software charging for a "subscription" to their virus signature update service. I am paying for something of value to me and it costs them something to maintain this data. I do have a problem with the same people extracting a little extra "squeeze" every couple of years and forcing me to learn yet another user interface just because they have decided that the old one looks little dated. Somehow, I don't buy (no pun intended) that their engine for scanning a byte stream has changed again."
I can't blame them. It takes effort to continually support old versions. This affects the bottom line. Companies(especially public ones) are all about making money. When it gets to a point where you are supporting people using old software and you are losing money, that's when you pull the cord. It's like Microsoft ending support for Win95. Can you blame them? It wasn't even that great when it first came out, 6 years ago. If I was them, I wouldn't have given people quite so long.
You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
A company can only be expected to support a prior version for so long. We develop vertical market apps, and support a single major revision back.
But what I'd also like to see is older versions being made free (as in beer) after a specfied time. DOS 6.0 and Win 3.11, old Amiga games, whatever. Since there's no real potential for those to ever make a profit again, why not help the handful of people who may still be able to make some use of them?
Is this trend to rent software actually a bad thing for companies? I work mostly in research/academia so a lot of our software is done in house and we dont have this problem (and the remainder's Linux etc) but I'd assume that both sides in business would benefit - the seller gets a constant revenue stream, no major bumps like the currently get with new releases (at least after Bug Fix 1 gets released *grin*) and the purchaser gets to see a fixed cost each quater rather than one off costs.
Ok, for the individual its not a good thing and don't get me started on the privacy issues of product activation but for a lot of things a continual rental model would be better and may stop quite the same level of boom & bust in the industry.
Well thats my $0.02 worth. Any opions from our corporate bretheran?
And the computer industry in general has demonstrated that the concept of ethics no longer applies when there is money at stake. Read the average EULA: you have to surrender fundamental rights, such as fair use. Worse than that, the developers generally absolve themselves of any responsibility or liability whatsoever -- they won't even guarantee that the software that you have just bought will do what they claim it does! What we're seeing is the culmination of an unfortunate trend. The creators of a piece of software for as long as they control it have a monopoly -- anyone committed to using their product is pretty much at their mercy. And that means money -- lots of money.
I am paying for something of value to me and it costs them something to maintain this data.
If companies support (even at a cost) older products (take Ed's example of partition magic), it *does* cost the company money to train their support staff, and often the number of (paid) calls coming through asking help aren't enough to warrant the extra education for staff...
Microsoft have been successfully applying this business model for years. Why bother to fix old code when you can sell an upgrade to the latest version with this year's fashionable look?
Martin Brooks / Slayer99 #linux / UIN 2178117
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This forced obsolescence is evil. If you collect old arcade machines you come across a similar problem - the suicide battery. Certain Japanese manufacturers had a small amount of battery powered RAM that held the decryption tables to decode the game ROMs - when the battery goes your cabinet is useless!
Why? Why? Why? If I buy something I expect it to work and I certainly don't expect the manufacturer to put a time bomb in it! Same goes for software. The problem boils down to the fact that you don't own the software - you just get a licence to use it under whatever restrictive clauses the vendor can dream up. There's certainly something to be said for genuinely free software - once you've got it it is your's to do with as you please.
--
Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
To be honest, I had not thought that much about "software licensing" up till this point, mainly because it seems to me that entrepreneurial hackers will always find a way around that type of thing. But when a piece of software actually requires connection to a corporate server to continue functioning (as with a virusscan program), this seems to fall only slightly short of blackmail.
Diablo II automatically updated software when you logged onto Battle.net. Imagine if one day, everyone who logged on recieved with their "update" a notice that from now on, all character classes but barbarian would be available on a subscription-based service only.
Ridiculous, yes... but the analogy is apt. People who bought something 4 years ago with a certain promise of functionality deserve to be able to keep that functionality.
What if car manufacturers randomly repo'ed our cars because they figured the engines were out of date?
Try using Autocad for a while.....i don't care if they no longer support older versons...but deciding when the older versions can no longer be upgraded is damn close to blackmail....unless you pay the upgrade price then and there....you'll have to buy complete versions and full price.
for a $25 piece of software?....fair enough
for $1000s of dollars worth of software...they have a responsibility to thier customers to retain the value of the software _especially_ when the licenses are non transferrable _and_ hardware/software locked.
I know all the arguments about how it's a corporation's responsibility to maximize profits for their shareholders, etc., but the only thing I see here is greed. I see people being laid off left and right while CEOs take home bonuses that would have paid all those salaries for another year. I see cuts made in quality and higher charges made for support while the price of the products go up. I see employees put on salary and threatened into working long hours for no extra consideration. When the fuck did money become more important than everything else?
I probably sound pollyannish saying that when I pay for something, I want to use it how I see fit. I know all the college kids are going to start whining that I should use Linux instead, but I don't like Linux, as much as I've tried, so I guess I just have to take whatever crap the corps feed me. I've been a victim of the PowerQuest upgrade cycle myself, and it pisses me off as much as it pisses the next guy off. The software isn't worth $50 per year, but that's what they manage to drag out of me because of their harsh policies.
But more than the sunset clauses, more than crappy software, the greed makes me shake my head. When is enough money enough? What is gained by adding another couple million to your own bank account when there are so many there already? In the end, you're going to die anyway, so at least make the world a better place rather than just stuffing your money chest fuller. Do these people care that no one likes them? Do they care that they're despised and all their plebs would ditch them at the first opportunity? Has greed outweighed every other thing in life? It looks to me like it has.
The s/w vendors know we (and others like us):
Look at stuff like MS-Word/Exchange/Outlook/OE. Are there *really* many more features in each that warrant the massive recycling of s/w that most large institutions go through regularly?
It's getting just as bad with the app server markets as well. Vendors conveniently dropping support for older (their own) products (when the apps are running just fine for us) or for the OS level our stuff runs on just to have to buy new licenses (despite the fact that we do pay "maintenance" yearly).
When I compare those with personal programs like MusicMatch and Xmanager - both with lifetime licenses and very decent feature-rich updates - it's hard to let the others justify their practices.
Mind the gap...
It wouldn't be so bad if when you pruchased a license to use their product you were offered:
option a:
Pay more for the license NOW, support guarenteed for 10 years.
option b:
Pay less for the license NOW, support for 2 years, then subscrition support thereafter.
If they justify re-charging to cover support costs then this is a far more honest way of doing it.
If they wanna characge because their product license has expired, then tough.
After all nodoby buys a product 'software', just a license to use software. If the license has limited lifetime perhaps consumers in this market economy should shop elsewhere?
I bought a 1989 Honda Civic 12 years ago, and it's starting to get old. A bit of rust here and there, occasionally it has trouble starting... the sort of things you often hear about with old cars.
I wanted to replace it with a new car, but guess what? They don't make 1989 Honda Civics any more. If I want a new car, they tell me, I'll have to buy the latest model, which not only looks different and is more expensive, but would require me to learn an entirely new UI.
Somehow I don't buy (no pun intended) that the engine for building a car has changed again.
Tarsnap: Online backups for the truly paranoid
Companies that don't keep on evolving their products, even just their UIs, are dead companies. If you want to keep on business, you'll have to stay focused and on the edge.
Would you rather have backward compatibility through countless versions? This has been tried, you know - the x86 CPU architecture has it's roots in ancient CPU designs, and has generally been backward compatible for ages. It's been lifted up to x386 compatibility, sure, but that's still way old and a huge constraint on the available choices. Or what about the Windows APIs? I've coded a lot of 16- and 32-bit apps in Windows (yeah, I know - but it's my job), and you still see lots of outdated crap in the Win32 API, just to keep backward compatibility.
The point is - the cost to upgrade the system once in a while is (usually) money well spent on getting a system that's not getting way too old. It may cost you now, but you'll probably end up saving countless hours of frustration later. At least that's what my experience tells me...
Black holes are where God divided by zero
Telling me to upgrade my linux kernel just 'cause Marcelo Trosatti tought 2.4.5 was in it's last days....
hmmmm... wait a minute... no I wouldn't. the kernel if free as in freedom AND as in beer. I can upgrade it every week if I want. Call me at will Marcelo...
What ? Me, worry ?
As much as it pains me to point this out:
.01 added to the version number, I'm sure your competition has been working on better features in the meantime {evil grin}.
The days of buying a product for a fixed fee with which includes lifetime support and upgrades are over.
Even as cynical as I am it's obvious that particular business model wont work, even as much as I like it.
The purchase model is continually trying to be killed off and replaced with the subscription based model as this allows for much more consistent balance sheets - take the two cases:
you have X users each paying Y every year
you have X users who paid Y for our product and if they like it they might pay Z in the future, but only if they choose to upgrade.
Which one do you think sounds more palatable to the board - one off payments or regular payments?
Counter-arguements such as the model for products like WinZip spring to mind - they still provide a cheap registration with lifetime support and upgrades but I'd imagine their mission is to get at least some of that massive userbase to register.
Realistically I'd be happy to have a product that I buy then pay to upgrade every few years (cough cough windows) but i start to resent that upgrade cost when it is almost identical to the cost of buying a new copy (cough cough windows).
Also you have to bear in mind that whenever a new windows version comes along the UI changes and so there is a mad clamour to change your programs to make them feel like they too are part of this new UI. Products that look ugly don't sell well to the masses so it pays to keep your software looking neat, tidy and user-friendly.
If you will try to sell me a product and then a year or two along the line try to offer me a cheap upgrade (e.g. Paint Shop Pro) then fine, I'll buy if you've added new features - however if you haven't and it's the same product in a new bundle with a
What I really resent is this latest trend of having to buy a physical product AS WELL AS pay a subscription fee (most PVR's) - either choose one method or the other if you want me as a customer, as both simply leaves me to look at your competition.
Seems like they are using the auto industry model, where people upgrade their cars every 2 years(except for the poor who have to keep them til they fall apart). The problem with that is that cars are mechanical, and do tend to wear out. Software, on the other hand, is just electrons, that are good for as long as the medium that holds them isn't corrupted. It is a new type of product, and the companies need to find a new way of making money off of it, but most of them aren't looking, they are just using the old models. Suprising how conservitive this *cutting edge* industry is.
Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
It is an problem of the business modell of selling software as a boxed product. This modell is only viable if you have a snowball market like MicroSoft enjoyed in previous years. But they are not typical for other vendors that have fixed market size. There are only so many people in the US that use Bookkeeping software. And it cannot be sold abroad.
While the support cost are something that acrues only after you have sold the software, there is also the next development cycle to pay for. The worst thing that could happen to a vendor of boxed software is that the old version is 'good enough' for the customer.
Why do I use a emacs, an editor that is 20 years old? Because with version 19 it was just good enough to support what I need. That was like 6-7 years ago. Yes I now have v21, because it came with my SuSE, but while I would have payed for the v19, I would never have upgraded.
Microsoft has realized this problem many years ago, and has been mellowing the customers with rumours about 'only-by-subscription' licenses, ever since it became apperent to them that their market is about to be saturated and that people will stop bying new licenses. And that even with the Redmond-Tax on new computers, which ensures that units are sold everytime somebody buys a new computer. But guess what. That market will soon be saturated as well. Apart from OC-Geeks and Hardcore Gamers today PCs are just 'fast enough' for most users.
Wellcome to the new world of subscription based Software. Did you realize that this will put OpenSource on a even more even footing with the proprietory kind, as the costs become easily comparable. Maybe that is why Microsoft fears OpenSource. Not because of the Windows-Linux comparison, but because of the ability to sell support for StarOffice cheaply.
my EUR 0.02
If that's their goal, they should just provide free upgrades. Then the customers would get better protection without spending a few more dollars. Lots of shareware programs do this, like WinZip and mIRC. I'd be much more willing to buy a program if I would get free upgrades for life, or at least for a few years (and if I didn't have to give up all my rights in the EULA).
It would also be nice to have the old versions made free. In my 8086 Assembly programming class, lots of people found the old Borland C compiler (2.0) very useful, which is available for free in Borland's "software museum". We only needed it for one assignment (linking ASM and C code into one program), and nobody is going to buy a C compiler for that (newer compilers make writing 16-bit code difficult anyway).
Most decent pieces of software should evolve and improve. Normally, if you are a serious user, you will want to have the latest version. The year's old source of GhostScript used to be free - but I was prepared to pay for this year's when I was doing something complex.
However, occasionally, the software does not evolve in the way you want. I know one image processing product that was lean and efficient, if a little dull. It was bought by another company, who bloated the code, stuck in all sorts of unwanted features, and slowed the thing to a crawl. The dedicated users are still using a version from about 5 years ago. Okay, shit happens, but they still had a working program. A 'sunset' clause would force these users to abandon their working product or fear litigation, but would not supply a workable alternative. Ten years or more ago, you used to get a lot of booby-trapped software, dongled code, and stuff like that, because it was sold by people who did not really understand software, what it cost, and why it was worth it.
We don't want to go back to those days. My gut feeling is that there ought to be a legal challenge to 'sunset' clauses. Whether you read them or not when you open the product packaging or click on the 'install' button, you ought to expect the one-machine use of the product in its supplied state, unless there are clearly explained exceptional reasons. Anything else would be a breach of the normal balance of trust between the user and the supplier. In the US, this sort of thing ought to attract federal anti-trust suits.
Well, given that you're getting an improved/updated product, it makes sense that the companies are trying to recoup some of the costs of developing/supporting this. You *do* have the choice of using the old product, even if it is not (anymore) optimally suited to what you need it to do.
It would be a different matter if the product would stop working after a certain amount of months/years but this case is about updating a product to handle changed market/security condsiderations. Would you buy a hammer which was designed to break after having hit a nail 1000 times? Probably not. Would you buy a new and radically improved hammer if it offered compelling features that the old hammer didnt? Probably.
The irony is that there's an entire industry feeding of the security holes in Microsoft's product line. If everyone were running Linux/xxBSD/UNIX, there would be no Anti-Virus software industry, at least certainly not one as big as we have it today.
It's a simple matter of focus. We cannot provide the high level of support we want to if we spread our support staff too thinly. Neither can we create new and better product if our engineering cycles are stuck frobbing and tweaking the old stuff.
Granted, by the time EoF is reached, the product pretty much just works. And no one is stopping anyone from using it forever. But a company can only keep its left foot so far behind its right foot before it falls on its ass. Ok, strained metaphore, but the point is still valid, IMHO.
On the other hand, sw or hw that just stops working (or starts extorting) after a period of time is just wrong . Again, dropping support (including things like anti-virus updates) after a while is just fine. Many products really do need to evolve. Using sw to hold your customer hostage, on the other hand ...
Imagine a word processor that, at the designated EoL, would only come up and say "I'm sorry, Dave. I don't think I can do that. Please see your software retailer for the latest version of WordFrob, which may well allow you to open your old files, if you hurry!". Or a mail server that, when EoL is reached, sends a message to the BSA when you try to send mail with it, resulting in jack-booted thugs at your door shortly later.
Anyway, though I think some of what was mentioned in the artical was iffy, most of it was perfectly understandable. Much of the whining, bitching and moaning here is just uninformed tripe. Though I concede that there are companies out there that really do their best to keep users on an upgrade treadmill, most companies just want to put out new and better product. I wish that at some point Intel would have grown a pair and pulled the plug on many of the crap in their processor design that's only there for backwards compatability. Not all at once, of course, but a sliding window of support makes perfect sense, both economically and technically.
#include // my opinions are my own, not my employer's and all that
I wanted to replace one of the suspension springs, but guess what? They don't make 1989 half inch bolts anymore. If I want a new bolt, the tell me, I'll have to buy a whole new car which not only looks different and is more expensive but they have replaced the steering wheel with the controls out of a segway and the acellerator is voice operated.
Somehow I don't buy (no pun intended) that half inch bolts have changed again.
Support options have always been there. This is what we are talking about right?
The only difference I see in this system is forcing people who don't need support to pay.
Support for me is two things.
- Getting the product to work. (User/setup)
- Getting bug fixes.
While the first I would eventually pay for, the second I don't see why I should have to pay again for fixes for a product that should work when I buy it the first time.
The only other thing that is tied in is upgrades. While some people like the occasional upgrades a lot of places will drop them if it means paying hard cash for it.
I certainly wouldn't tie myself into the rental model.
I hope all closed source companies do this, hell I hope thay make it a 6 month cycle.
things like this will make OSS more and more attractive to the users out there.
I just love it when you see an entire industry slitting their own throats and bleeding to death slowly.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Software companies from just about day one, have been doing this.
Call it what you want, a "sunset clause", a "bomb", etc. Basically the software expires and you must pay up for another.
The main cause of this isn't closed source software, but lack of competition.
It's the lack of competition that allows the companies to do this. Obviously if there was another software service you could buy from, you would, wouldn't you?
Even today there are a lot of small industries that buy software with these "expiration dates" in them because they have no where else to go, and can not afford to pay someone to write their own code.
To all you up and coming developers.... find these markets and make software for them. It won't make you rich, but it's a start....
www.slightlycrewed.com - Because aren't we all?
There is a problem with anology's : the comparasion does not work in the end.
If you compare it with antivirus software: you can still get repairs on you old Civic. (is this the same as paid software updates?)
If you want to replace it you will get a different car, but it has still the same user interface. There may be some new bells and whissles, but there is a very small learning time.
But then the anology goes wrong. You can still make perfect copies of your old software. Technically you can take your 1 software package and install it to 100's of PC on your site. Or rolout word'98 to the next 100 you buy. If they make it impossible to buy licences (pay them..) the technical possible becomes illigal. How would you compare that to your 12 year old civic? And a virus signature update is not exactly the same as repair, maybe it should be compared with a oil change.
And we are talking 1-2 year in software, not 12 year....
Whinging is a fine sport and can be enjoyed in groups or when alone.
It can bring about much change and can be well worthwhile.
The ultimate solution of course is to do it yourself if you don't like the way other people are doing it.
If you can't you are left to consider that these companies are perhaps merely excercising their market value to extract as much as they can for their efforts. You might also think that the various competitors didn't start up at the same time yet are following the same revenue generation model.
This model exists I believe due to the short-term gullability of purchasers and the cunning of marketers.
If you are just paying for a new user interface, then more fool you for paying. Of course you are not aware of changes in the underlying byte-stream scanning engine, why should you be, but what efforts have you made to find out? Or did you hope the marketing arm would [raise the price and] tell you all about these [proprietary and hard to understand to the layman] changes when pricing gimmicks sell better?
Remember how scanners had to change to be able to detect all variants of polymorphic viruses, consider Nortons trick of emulating the first few instructions of each program to see if they matched the pattern of dodgyness. Testing the viability of these options costs a lot, so expect to pay again and again even if the research did not pay off.
Unless you suspect a cartel in operation, the wide variety of companies practicing such schemes surely indicates there is not that much fleecing going on.
As for licensing terms, yes I find them rather bogus but it is the best attempt at defence from a lawsuit crazy country when the software industry was weak and growing.
And the answer has always been if you don't like the terms, do it yourself.
I happily am able to but have better things to do (family) and so don't, but get more enjoyment.
Sam
blog.sam.liddicott.com
Nor does it wear out.
Basically, if you want it for the same task you bought it for and you run the same environment, it will work forever.
If you want to run an old car you can always take it to an independant garage or fix it yourself, if you can be botherered to learn the skills. Wouldn't it be nice if software was like that...
I recently upgraded to Windows XP, hoping to get a stability boost from the NT engine in XP. I often work from home, and the multitasking required by my work had Win98 bluescreen as often as once an hour. I dreaded the upgrade because of what I knew was going to happen: I am now in the process of reloading my favorite applications one by one to see which ones are going to work and which ones are going to require upgrade in order to run under WinXP.
I couldn't even start the intall program for Easy CD Creator 4 before Windows XP itself told me that my version was out of date and I'd need to upgrade. Even the shrink-wrapped copies of ECDC at BestBuy touted a download you could get to make it XP-compliant (ie, it doesn't even work out of the box).
Music Match Jukebox 4 loads, but hangs my system the minute I try to rip am MP3. I can download the latest version, but in order for it to rip at 160K I have to pay for an upgrade.
I don't even feel the need to get the latest versions of these programs; they're jam-packed with extraneous features I won't use. I need to upgrade for the sole reason that I upgraded my OS.
All other apps combined, I'm running about 50/50 - half of my stable of frequently-used programs run under XP; half don't.
Granted, I could create a system partition for my old copy of Win98SE, load the program there, and keep going. I could cobble together a script of command-line utilities to do some of the same things under Linux (or maybe find a decent screen-driven app, but most are lacking in completeness and/or integration). Or I can knuckle under and ante up to maintain status quo.
*Sigh.* If I ever needed a kick in the pants to migrate more of my day-to-day functionality to my Linux partition, it arrived on my doorstep yesterday.
"Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?"
...is that people seem to think that "EULA" stands for "End User Licence Agreement," and that the user is being licenced to do something.
In fact, if companies would more clearly call them "ALUE", or "Agreement of License to the User's (back) End", then it would be clear what these things are really for, and what the customer was really agreeing to, without having to read many pages of lawyereese.
On the bright side: if commercial software publishers get very agressive about their sunset clauses and charging regular relicensing fees, that is going to be a bigger advertisement for Open Source and Free software than anything any of us could do!
-Rob
Hi!
I would suggest using OpenAntivirus.org, a GPL virus scanner.
Kurt
The problem is that end-users don't actually like having to learn a new interface just to keep using the same software to do the same job. In my experience, most people learn to use their software by rote: "click here then click there then type XYZZY in the text box". Anyone who manages to form a coherent mental model of what the application is actually doing is a genuine Power User in my book. I really hate the idea of forcing rote-learners to acquire a new interface every time the UI designers read a new textbook on the Right Way to Interact.
I accept that sometimes upgrades are issued to give the product useful new features or fix bugs, but I suspect many of the upgrades out there are simply attempts to provide incremental additions of arty-farty graphics-weenie k3w1n355.
It is a woman's prerogative to change other people's minds.
. The gas pump doesn't stop supporting your old car!
Actually, that isn't true. They do stop supporting old cars. Think cars that only ran on leaded fuel. Think cars that didn't run on sulphur free fuels.
I too still use Word 97 on my laptop (it doesn't run Linux well) - and don't see the point of updating.
And I bought a 1989 Ford Escort 12 years ago, and contrary to intuition, it's as good as new. Indeed, it is indistinguishable from a brand new 1989 model Ford Escort.
Now Ford just called me the other day, and said that if I wanted to continue driving, I'd have to purchase a 2002 model Ford, because my current car would stop working at the end of the year.
Somehow I don't buy (no pun intended) that the environment has changed to such a degree that my current car is incapable of taking me from A to B nowadays.
yes, we have no bananas
While your statements are pretty accurate, they're slightly missing the point, I think. The subset clause isn't about support, it's about licensing. These things arbitrarily make it illegal for you to continue using your software after a certain time. There is no technical basis for this; it's purely a means to force you to upgrade.
As a hypothetical example, suppose I have an old 486 running Windows 95 and Office 95, and it works and does its job well enough for my purposes. Why should I be forced to throw it away and upgrade to the latest and greatest, at vast cost to me, for no particular benefit? (NB: As far as I'm aware, Microsoft don't actually have a policy like this on the products concerned. This is not a Redmond slam.)
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
You have to look a little deeper for the real problem. As a society, we are used to selling *things*. *Things* eventually wear out, require repair, get consumed, etc. Then you have to go out and buy another *thing* to replace it. Some *things* last longer than others, but all are essentially ephemeral.
Even though the concepts embodied in a book are eternal, the book itself is ephemeral, so in the public mind it became a *thing*, just like any other *thing*.
Enter the electronic age, and the liberation of the idea from the containing physical medium.
Aside from all the copyright brou-ha-ha, look at the implications on a software industry. Simply put, bits don't wear out. They may become obsolete; their physical expression may wear out; but the bits themselves don't.
So how do you build a "Software Industry". Either you force obsolescence, so that what you just sold will 'wear out' after a while, and you can once again treat it like a *thing*, or you strive for a newer, more appropriate model.
From what I can tell, software actually began on a 'non-*thing*' model, with revenue largely derived through service. But once the dollar potential got big enough, the *thing* model came in and took over.
OTOH, now we're nearing the end of the exponential growth curve in many areas, and maybe there's a chance for a newer, more sane model to re-emerge. People are getting tired of the upgrade churn of forced obsolescence.
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
I thing propetary software companies working for us.
Yes guyz, these fools needs lesson. Punish them hard for the using propetary software...
We are on your side. Increase the new relase cycle, Every year make new Relase,every relase change your software design, every year request more money for your indusry acceptted, nicelly worked, propetary software.
[My english is better than most other people's Turkish, so please point out mistakes politely. Thank you.]
Posting as ac for a reason.
/. and become sophisticated enough to understand that.
The company I work for follows the support-subscription-and-charge-a-premium-to- upgrade-to-the-new-version business model . Since it was in the company's interest to increase revenue, they came out with a new whiz bang gui version of an old character based tool. The customer base ooed and aahed over the pretty screens and didn't realize they were being forced marched off of an ugly, functional and stable platform onto a pretty and unstable platform. Never mind that the new tool didn't support all the requisite customer functions - it was Pretty.
Pretty was worthless. During the last major migration, Pretty went down in flames. Pretty has been killed and now the company is saying "But wait! We've got Beautiful over here! Use that instead!"
During all of this, the customers have had two choices - stay with an old tool that works and the company has announced is dead or migrate. Since the company is about maximizing profits, the company didn't ever consider that it was in the customer's best interest to just incrementally revise the old stalwart tool.
As a result, our customers are pissed and our competitors are having a field day. However, even if the customers migrate to our competitors, they're not fundamentally better off. Our competitors use the same business model. Company knows that and the customer knows that.
Given what's happened over the past year, if I were the customer, I'd insist that the source be opened up. If the company says no, then migrate to a vendor that says yes. That way, if the old tool does 95% of what I want, I can pay someone to add the other 5%.
My guess is it'll be twenty years before the customers start reading
So, who thinks that after the good GNUs/O-Sers/penguinista rebels are deleted, everybody will eventually be 'reNTing" their OS/apps?
We're thinking that if communications/commerce are outlawed/censored/$funnelled$, only outlaws will be able to communicate/commerce effectively.
fud is dead?
It wasn't even that great when it first came out, 6 years ago
Actually it was so much better than the 3.1 interface, that, at the time it might have been considered revolutionary, if the Mac hadn't beat them to the punch.
The funny thing is, a subscription model is pretty much the only way to make money off open-source software. All you FAIC freaks better start getting used to the idea, if you expect open-source to be the wave of the future.
ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
The article, and several of the comments here, seem to be confusing the issue to an extreme.
Software companies, whether they're selling you a license or whether they're free software companies, will have continued operating expenses if they are supporting your software. There is, IMO, absolutely nothing wrong with requiring continued payments to keep up support, since there is an ongoing expense. But some people here seem to think that is evil, for reasons I cannot fathom.
What is unacceptable is software that just stops working (note that "oh, I upgraded to WinFUBAR-2005-SpecialEdition-2.11 and they want me to pay for an upgrade to support it, those greedy bastards!" is not software that stopped working.) Timebombs are bad, and probably shouldn't even be legal.
Bottom line: if you want someone to support and update something into the future, you should be prepared to pay for it into the future. If you just want it to continue to work as it always has, paying someone a subscription is ridiculous.
to pull the money threw, my $on ITs all left up to you.
I know how you feel, I still use a windows 3.1 program to mess with wav files. Why upgrade? I hardly use most of the features now. I guess I feel sort of fortunate to be using windows 2000 which has run pretty much every old program I have on it. By contrast, I know a lot of people that switched to XP , which told them to go pound sand when they try to install fairly recent programs.
Usually when something doesn't work, I find it's time to look for (open source) alternatives. If you're looking for something to rip CD's, try CD-DA X-Tractor, and as far as I know, Winamp works fine on XP and is free. When I didn't want to upgrade Corel Word Perfect 7, I switched to Open office. When ICQ stopped working, I switched to Miranda ICQ. Usually you sort of pay the price in dealing with the small quirks in these programs, but at least you have the assurance that they won't pressure you to upgrade... and hell, it's free to upgrade anyway, so why not?
Personally I really like the way These guys do things. You pay one decent fee ONCE, and that's it. Upgrades/fixes/whatever as long as you want.
As an end user, you can easily install the latest and greatest. If it doesn't work out, too bad, you revert to your old installation (you have backups, right?).
Now imagine a company, with 2500 desktops. It's not that simple to just upgrade to the latest and greatest. Hardware might have to be replaced, printer drivers might not be available, connectivity with third party vendor products may break, users and support staff have to be trained, etc. Upgrading the corporate desktop can involve thousands of $ per desktop (literally) and no end of grief and confusion.
Now, look at the database backend. The one application that, if it fscks up, your corporation might be a casualty after a few days. You don't go ahead and just install Sybase 12.5. because the salesman told you it's nice and 11.0.3.3. is anyway no more supported.
What you do is very carefully evaluate the merrits of the new version including testing each and every query of your application towards that release. If this is not feasible you test at the bear minimum all those queries that have to be assumed to have changed their behavior. For example: Sybase is notorious for changing sub query behavior from release to relase (this is not necessarily a bad thing). Now at the very minimum you will have to test all sub queries and you'll have to function test the application in order to avoid nasty surprises.
Add to that complexity, that you have interconnected middleware and probably a platform to create the application front end. That's not all just interchangeable with a snap of a finger.
Now, on automatic software updates: Don't even get me started...
ich bin der musikant
mit taschenrechner in der hand
kraftwerk
First of all you should have researched a bit to figure out how many of your apps would need to be upgraded to work properly on WinXP. If you migrated from WIn98 to Win2k using ECDC 3.x you had to download a cheap hack upgrade to get it to work properly or buy version four. You should have expected to spend time time and/or money upgrading all the shit you used to use. Would you take a RedHat 5.x install and replace libc completely with glibc and jam the 2.4 kernel in it without upgrading anything else? No you wouldn't. Don't bitch at Windows because you lack forsight. You'd have the same problems upgrading to Win2k from Win98.
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
This is just my opinion as a software developer.
;) ) costs money, but hopefully the sale of the product makes up for that. The product will, most likely, change (hopefully for the better) over time but free support for the product should last no less than 6 months. 6 months should give a customer plenty of time to get familiar with the installation and use of the software.
I have never, nor will I willingly place a time bomb in software I create that forces a customer to buy another version of said software needlessly.
Having said that though, there is one approach along these lines that I don't necessarily disagree with. When the customer buys the product, part of what they, the customer, is expecting is support. Employing support people (What, you don't expect me to do this myself do you? I'm a programmer.
After the predesignated length of time - which, by the way, the customer should be made aware of from the start - support should cost money. Keeping your tech support knowledge base going, keeping knowledgeable, experienced people on your tech support staff and supporting older versions of your software all cost money. The more versions of your software you support, the more it will wind up costing you. Since these old versions don't reflect new sales, the costs have to be made up with charging for support.
Of course, you could go to another extreme and offer either free or significantly reduced-cost upgrades for life for your customers. That's always nice.
My sigs always suck.
-- Some people say they can tell the time by looking at the Sun, but I have trouble seeing the numbers.
for their shareholders.
They are there to SELL US THINGS WE WANT.
If ANY company starts off with the plan "get lots of money", they WILL fail.
"This guy was very insistent that if we did not buy renewals we would be sued [because] our current licenses would be expiring after two years,"
This example isn't a case of getting charged for tech support, or a company ending its support. Its a having software "expire" right from under you. And a long as software is "licensed" the customer is at the mercy of the vendor and that license. There was a similar attempted 'expiration' when a certain freeware video conferencing program was finally bought out by a company that had been licensing the technology. Problem is not long before this the buyout, the freewarwe guys released an upgraded program that was on par in key ways with the what the new company was planning to release.
Heres the rub. The new company tried to declare the freeware software that had already been released, "expired". They then began to try to pressure folks to delete, and pull from their websites software that was packaged with a freeware license.
Who know's whats lurking down in the bottom of those EULA's - I figure the big boys have inserted a legal ace or two in there EULA's for just such an thing, "This license may be terminated when we say so, and you must quit using it and burn your hard drive" and are just figuring out to keep Joe Customer from blowing chunks when they try to push it down his throat.
-- Some people say they can tell the time by looking at the Sun, but I have trouble seeing the numbers.
you could always write your own software. I can understand people bitching about consumer electronics companies dicking you over software after you've purchased their hardware (after all, it's costing them money to write the drivers, why not let me do it?) but really, if you dont like random software company's upgrade cycle then whip out your compiler and write your own. Oh you cant? Then I guess you'll just have to wear it man.
How we know is more important than what we know.
We use InocculateIT for anti-virus and upgrades to the latest version are included in our maintenance agreement. Computer Associates has been excellent about backporting their older versions for the latest garbage the Beast throws our way.
Think of a "group of people" brought together for one purpose. If that purpose is business, then making a profit is what they are all about. In the United States business schools probably teach as much ethics as they do in the computer science program I graduated from ( A 1 Semester hour course, as compared to 3 for normal classes ). Businesses do not exist to promote good ethics. They exist to make money.
This is so sad. "Hey, so we do bad things, we have no choice, we're a business!"
You do have a choice. Employees have a choice. Shareholders have a choice. Company managers have a choice.
I am Managing Director (that's CEO to you) of an IT company. A lot of my clients are reasonably ignorant about IT. It would be fairly easy for me to lie to them and sell them products and services that they don't really need, or deliberately lock them into solutions that it will be difficult for them to get out of again. It would probably make my company more profitable, and I know of companies that do it. But you know what? I don't do it. Why? Because it's wrong. When I deal with my clients, I am dealing with people. I don't think to myself "Hey, I can fuck these ignorant guys over and make lots of money." To me, and I would hope to most people, my personal values are more important than getting rich.
I imagine that Bill Gates rocks himself to sleep at night thinking "I've got all those suckers locked in and now I can raise prices and they can do nothing about it! What a bunch of losers! I'm the king of the world!" I know people like Bill Gates are highly respected in America, but they aren't so much in my corner of the world - they're seen as greedy, selfish ego-maniacs.
If someone says that they will not warrant their .sheesh.
product, you have everything it in your power
not to use the product.
If it is really important to you, write your own.
I am not sure when a software vendor forced you
to buy their software - I bet you weren't forced
to buy the computer that you typed that drivel
into !
Grow up, the world isn't here to serve your whim
- Penguin Kicka
"... Granted, I could create a system partition for my old copy of Win98SE, load the program there, and keep going. ..."
Why you didn't set up a dual-boot for a new OS install is the big question. It's fairly easy under the XP install menu. Believe it or not, my XP box (AMD TBird 950) has a dual-boot with Win95 (USB/FAT 32).
No offense intended, but the upgrades should have been figured into the cost of your new OS; to say that paying more for upgrades was implied by a new OS is an understatement. Remember the definition of stupidity (we're all guilty at some time or another)---
"Stupidity is doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting a different result."
When is enough money enough? What is gained by adding another couple million to your own bank account when there are so many there already? In the end, you're going to die anyway, so at least make the world a better place rather than just stuffing your money chest fuller. Do these people care that no one likes them? Do they care that they're despised and all their plebs would ditch them at the first opportunity? Has greed outweighed every other thing in life?
Publicly traded corporations have Boards and CEO's who are responsible to the shareholders. The company has a charter which in most cases states that the Board is _required_ to run the company in a way which "maximizes profits" for the shareholders. If they do not do this they will be sued and/or replaced by the shareholders. This is why you see corps doing such patently unethical things as laying off all their enmployees and re-hiring them at reduced salaries, or "outsourcing" labour to third-world contractors, or polluting and then paying the fines when it's cheaper than not polluting would be! They have to not only _make a profit_, but in fact MAXIMIZE profits, no matter what. The shareholders, and in many cases the Board, care _nothing_ for what anybody thinks of them, unless it impacts those profits. Then it's time for a little creative marketing, not acting ethically.
That's why I'm a (democratic) socialist. Un- or under-regulated capitalism inevitably slides into depravity and unimaginable greed.
Freedom: "I won't!"
I too am disappointed that Power Quest has moved to a $50 upgrade path from their old $30 rate they used for so long.
However, if the upgrades truely offer nothing of value to you, then why do you get it? The only reason I upgraded lately is because I moved to Windows 2000 and the old version of Partition Magic I had did not work with NTFS.
You see, by choosing to go to W2K from '98, I also chose to upgrade Partition Magic as well. As for upgrading Drive Image - unless you chose to upgrade to XP, you could have stayed with Drive Image 4. In any case, is it Power Quest's fault that Microsoft releases new file systems with every OS release?
While I share your pain, I think you anger is misdirected...
The Doctor is Out... (Meditating on the Tau of WAN's)
If a SW developer wants to change the rules, fine. But consider your "customers* " and what you owe them for your current prosperity.
Change the model all you want, but if you stop supporting/updating/selling a given SW product, release the old, functionally limited (by the developer's own definition, unless all the improvements are just window dressing) product as a free d/l.
Even Apple will let you d/l OS7.6 for free. No, it's not supported, but it is a perfectly decent OS. Users of old, probably free computers (read "the poor") can get into the game for nearly nothing. Apple reaps goodwill and potential customers.
It has got to be a big red flag if a developer won't release old, unsupported SW for fear that nobody will buy the new stuff. What's the good of your latest and greatest?
SW is different than a car or a TV. Users must invest time and greymatter to learn it's ins-and-outs; you compel them to invest time and money in your wares. It is economical to keep using your stuff; the money is just half the investment.
*customer- the guy who PAID you for a product, uses that product and is predisposed to support your future products with his MONEY. Alienate him at your peril.
GoZilla used to be a really slick download manager. Then they were bought out by Radiate, which prompty installed spyware. Okay, I thought, I'll just use OptOut to remove the spyware and continue using it. Well, then I learned that the new version requires you to pay extra $$. Apparently the new company doesn't honor the "free upgrades" policy of the original company with which I purchased the software...
I'd be willing to bet that Bill Gates actually believes that people buy Windows because they think it is a great product. Not because they are tied in with no other feasible choices, but because they genuinely prefer Windows to any of the alternatives. In a cyclical way, he is right. Windows is the best choice for most consumers and developers because most people choose it.
Still, less and less people are going to keep upgrading. I remember the rush to 2000, it was on everyone's minds. We have no plan for moving to XP. I'm not saying we won't, but there isn't any frenzy, no meetings starting 6 months before the release to discuss strategy. While I'm sure this happened some places, I'd be surprised if it is happening as much. Maybe it's a down economy, or many people are happy with what they have.
I think an equitable solution to the antitrust case is to force microsoft to offer licenses for their old software. Not necessarily support, but licenses. Once 2K is not offered, how are we going to expand (we do have about 20 extra licenses right now, but we could go through those easily)?
-no broken link
I am Managing Director (that's CEO to you) of an IT company. A lot of my clients are reasonably ignorant about IT. It would be fairly easy for me to lie to them and sell them products and services that they don't really need, or deliberately lock them into solutions that it will be difficult for them to get out of again. It would probably make my company more profitable, and I know of companies that do it. But you know what? I don't do it. Why? Because it's wrong. When I deal with my clients, I am dealing with people. I don't think to myself "Hey, I can fuck these ignorant guys over and make lots of money." To me, and I would hope to most people, my personal values are more important than getting rich.
Also small businesses, especially where they face competition, rely a lot on keeping on good terms with their customers and personal recommendations. Whilst attempting to rip off your custmers might get quite a bit of money short term long term it means you have no customers.
To a large company it's a case of "plenty more fish in the sea" to a monopoly it's a case of "so where else do they think they can go?"
Ok, I know cars and software are worlds apart, but bear with me. Automobile manufacturers will put a warranty on the cars they build (with certain limitations) for a specific period of time. Let's say your car won't start -- if it's in warranty, you call the local dealer, they fix it, you're on your way. If it's out of warranty - ch-ching! You pay. You don't seriously expect the auto companies to support every car they make forever, do you?
I see this same idea (replace "repair" with "support") applying to software. And as you can buy additional coverage for your car, you can buy an upgrade to your software. But there's no such thing as a free lunch.
I led a small, innovative Internet software company for six years -- long enough for several of our older products to be superceded by newer, different, or competing ones, and to ultimately be retired.
In most cases, when we finally discontinued all support for a product, especially a potentially mission-critical server product, we made a fully-functional perpetually-licensed version of the software available for free to anyone who wanted it, and who acknowledged that there was no warranty or support.
Our logic was simple: once there was no more money for us to make with a product, if people found it useful (in its completely unsupported state), then at least we were doing something good for our customer community, and hopefully generating a little goodwill.
I think for some kinds of software, making "retired" products available (unsupported) for free has the potential to be good for everyone involved.
-Mark Kriegsman
Ed's response:
~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
Also small businesses, especially where they face competition, rely a lot on keeping on good terms with their customers and personal recommendations.
This isn't just true of small businesses. It is also true of larger ones, at least in the UK. The most successful companies are very often the ones that "do the right thing." Virgin, The Body Shop, Easy Jet, The Co-op Bank, Marks & Spensers, John Lewis and many other large UK-based companies have been successful in part because they have strong ethical policies. In the UK (and even more so in other European countries) companies that do not "do the right thing" tend to be less successful and generally villified.
I dreaded the upgrade because of what I knew was going to happen: I am now in the process of reloading my favorite applications one by one to see which ones are going to work and which ones are going to require upgrade in order to run under WinXP.
It sounds like you didn't do your homework...
my mother has an IBM laptop with norton antivirus preinstalled. Thats good. You've paid for the software once. That was one of the motivators for her to buy the laptop. All she now need to do is to upgrade her access to the virus definition updates. Thats good. Now just recently her last subscription ran out and she wanted to renew this. She couldn't. There were nolonger an option to update order a new subscription to that version of Norton Antivirus. She have to upgrade the whole software package though all she need is the antivirus definition subscription to be updated. Something they did not say wasn't possible in the marketing. Now she can't and is running without antivirus.
She has lost her trust in the Antivirus company who's most important issue is trust in their service.
Similar cases are seen with small business clients of mine who were promised the same from the marketing of Norton.
They have been left out in the open as well.
Fact is that eg. the marketing of Norton antivirus have not lived up to its promises = false marketing in my book, and in law in Europe/Denmark it means a crime.
So I'm now wondering if we will see class action suits in America sooner or later knowing this is going on.
And just to finish it off.. Where are the companies strategy? it definately do not seem to be in quality when quality is defined by:
what is delivered / what is expected = 1
if the result is not 1, quality is questionable.
After having worked with McAfee, I can honestly say that there is a difference between scan engines and it is relevant to the OS and the latest viruses. I still don't think that purchasing a virus scan is a very good idea though.
The only sure-fire way to protect yourself from viruses is to frequently back up your data so you can easily blast an image when something goes awry.
"If I were to ask you a hypothetical question, what would you like it to be about?"
Remember when GM, Ford and Chrysler all made cars that fell apart after 2 to 3 years... even though the typical car loan finance period was 48 months?
Look what that kind of behavior did to knock down the big three automakers from their thrones (and they've never recovered fully either... now Honda, etc. rule the roost).
You may not be directly responsible for selling services to someone who does not need them, but the people purchasing _your_ services and reselling them to _their_ customers may very well be ripping people off. In that case _you_ are the one being ripped off by the middleman who is reaping the rewards of ignorance which you have ethical issues with.
That is simply because success is totally based on financial standing in America. More money = more respect (because you are successful). The founding principle of capitalism is this: greed motivates people to produce and provide goods and services. If you plan on doing any business in America you should _never_ forget that. Greed motivates _all_ people. Don't suppress your greedy intentions or the system will work against you.
What I don't like to see (on Slashdot and otherwise) is people complaining about greed, yet they don't realize it is a fundamental part of capitalism. Yet these same people swear up and down that capitalism is the best system in the world. Either you like greed and capitalism, or you clearly misunderstand that they go hand-in-hand.
Please don't pontificate about moral responsibilities taking precedence over your duty to your shareholders -- if you sincerely hold that view, you're derelict in your role and should seek another job.
You mean you actually LISTENED when XP told you easy CD creater 4 wouldn't work? I just installed it any way. So far, I've only had 1 problem with it on XP: I have 1 mp3 that I am unable to burn to CD out of the many I have for some strange reason. It keeps telling me that I dont have licenst to copy that 1 MP3 (even though I bought the album, and all of the other tracks are just fine...) Aside from that annoyence, it runs perfectly on my comp.
That is simply because success is totally based on financial standing in America. More money = more respect (because you are successful). The founding principle of capitalism is this: greed motivates people to produce and provide goods and services. If you plan on doing any business in America you should _never_ forget that. Greed motivates _all_ people. Don't suppress your greedy intentions or the system will work against you.
Sorry, I know this is going to be modded down as flamebait and troll or whatever, but I have to say this.
Americans have done a bit of soul searching recently. Many have been suprised to find strong negative reactions expressed towards them from people in other 'first world' countries. It is exactly the kind of opinions that are being expressed in this thread by Americans that cause some of those negative feelings.
No, capitalism does not excuse anyone from behaving in a moral and ethical way. No, greed does not motivate all people. No, capitalism isn't about "Getting other people to purchase something they don't need while paying more than it is worth". If you believe these things, then you have a value system that many people in the rest of the world would find very sad and hollow.
And then said company gets eaten alive by the competition.
I'm still running a copy of Windows 95 and PC DOS 5.0. The DOS machine is the best serial and LAN port sniffer debugger I have. I got tired of the install DOS, then Windows 3.1, then Windows 95 upgrade, SR patch 1 and 2 each time I needed to reformat the hardrive. I also stuck to it on one machine for my favorite older software. It also came without IE! It is my main web browser machine. It does not run VBS scripts! I decided not to upgrade, but see if they ever would get it fixed. They didn't. I do not buy OS upgrades from MS anymore. The only new OS I get is when I get new hardware. Due to the never buy the first version rule, I have never tried Windows ME, 2000, XP, etc. (I know 2000 is a rework of NT, don't flame. I use NT at work) None of these are to the 3rd gen yet. I do have Win CE ver 3.0 in a hand held PC and it has a bug (feature). I want to use at as a protable diagnostic dumb terminal using the serial port. It insists on dialing your external modem using the terminal program! It will not proceed without you filling in the dialog box for the phone number you wish to dial. No option to change it. I had to get another terminal program to get past this and disable the always in the way active sync. Even 3rd gen leaves a lot to be desired. I have no idea if the 4th gen (Pocket PC) has fixed any of this. I'm hoping Linux will get ported to the HP Jornada 680 hand held PC. That would fix lots of the problems. I know not to buy XP due to the forced upgrade cycle. Buying the first version was a huge mistake with Windows 95. I installed it from the CD. After install it couldn't find the sound card, modem, and of all things, the CD drive it was installed from. It will not work on new hardware. It will not work with USB at all. (OSR 2 required) and will not work with AGP video. (unless you prefer 16 color (not million color, 16 color) at a max resolution of 640 X 480) My machine which I was going to use to replace the WIN 95 machine got Linux instead. It recognised all the hardware except the sound on the first try. On new hardware with a new OS, I work with the dealer to get all the bugs worked out. I don't buy an OS upgrade and put it on old hardware. This takes care of BSA risks and hardware problems. I do not buy software with any expiration date on the box other than the usual tax and anti virus stuff that needs kept up to date for external reasons.
The truth shall set you free!
While that's a wonderful sentiment, I hope you understand that as Managing Director your responsibility is to your shareholders and, to a lesser extent, your employees.
Hey, guess what, my employees actually agree with our company policies. And I hope our shareholders do too, because if they've got our shares then I hope have found out a bit about the company.
Customers come first. Employees second. Shareholders third. Why? What's good for customers is good for our employees, and happy employees are good for profits which is good for shareholders.
Now, my company is small, but there are quite a few companies, even very big ones, who think the same way here in the UK. In fact I borrowed some of the wording of the above philosopy from Stelios Haji-loannou, currently one of the UK's most successful businessmen.
QED -- you are allowed to run your business the way you do because it is good for shareholders (i.e. they're happy with your results from whatever angle they're viewing it from).
Now extend your analogy to something relevant.
When did Microsoft, or any software vendor, call and tell you you couldn't run the copy of Word 6.0 you bought seven years ago?
Do you have a transcript or a recording of the call? We're eager to hear, the placards are all printed and people are raring to go.
QED -- you are allowed to run your business the way you do because it is good for shareholders (i.e. they're happy with your results from whatever angle they're viewing it from).
We're kind of having a circular argument here, but anyway, it is possible to have happy shareholders and stay ethical! Especially if you're shareholders are ethical people too! That's the kind of world I live in!
And then said company gets eaten alive by the competition.
Customers have a choice too. At least here in Europe, unethical companies lose customers.
I know that I have a fiduciary responsibility to my shareholders to operate the company in their best interests, and am subject to removal if I don't achieve that goal to their liking (or for any other reason, for that matter). In addition, as an officer I'm at risk legally (civil and criminal), especially if I'm negligent or derelict in my duties.
And as I originally stated that's also the kind of world I live in, and I also choose to operate the business I run ethically, and I treat employees well, etc.
The only point of contention is the reasoning behind why we run our businesses the way we do -- I do it to because I think that's the route to maximum profit in the mid- to long-term, you say you do it to satisfy your ethical/moral standards (with the happy side-effect being profitable in the long run). Admittedly, one could argue that we're splitting hairs here...
And then said company gets eaten alive by the competition.
Yep.
Of course, as a company director it would be ridiculous to say I'm not interested in maximising profits. I am. But maximising profits at the expense of all moral and ethical standards? Then no, I'm not interested in that. Nor are my employees. Nor my shareholders. And there are lots of other companies like mine, at least here in the UK.
Sorry, I seem to have cut and pasted the wrong thing in the message above! Should have been:
Admittedly, one could argue that we're splitting hairs here...
Yep.
Please don't pontificate about moral responsibilities taking precedence over your duty to your shareholders -- if you sincerely hold that view, you're derelict in your role and should seek another job.
In other words, money is more important than ethics. This nicely sums up everything that's wrong with America.
As I said in another post about the upgrade treadmill. You do have a choice. Keep the old box running. Only retire it when all it's functionality has been replaced. If you don't like the way XP and Ez CD Creator work, don't fall into the trap. Simply use the old hardware and make them come to your terms. You will buy when they have something new and useful, not same funcitonality but with pretty new interface for new OS. That is why I have a LAN. None of my machines run the same OS. None of my machines do everything. One machine is a Web Browser. One machine is a server (SAMBA). One machine is for Music (MIDI & MP3). One machine is the MS Office box (wife requries it and it's fun to layout photos in Powerpoint for printing) Photo printer comes with MS drivers only) and Digital camera workstation (WIN98 SE with USB). The older laptop for homework runs Win 95 OEM with Office because it only has 24 Meg memory and a 1 G hard drive. There isn't room for bloatware uprgrades on it. There is a reason to use different versions of an OS. No OS is one size fits all. Therefore there is no reason to standardize all your machines. The only place to standardize hardware is at the office where everybody's application is IE and Office and IT needs to be effecient. However if you do gaming, music editing, photo editing, CD burning, etc. you may want to look at OS'es best sutited to the task. Buggy ole WIN 95 upgrade comes without IE and will not run VBS scripts if Office isn't installed. Linux also makes a great browser machine.
The truth shall set you free!
I recently bought my first CD writer, and was trying to decide whether I should put it in the Windows98 PC or the Linux box. I knew that with Windows, the software would be easy to install from the included CD. But I also guessed, from my previous experience, that it would likely be bloated, and also include a lot of junkware/advertising, plus have the sort of problems you've described.
So I decided to give myself a little challenge by placing it in the Linux box.
Turned out to be fairly simple. It did require modifiying a couple config. files by hand ('lilo.conf' and 'fstab'), but the HOWTO explained this clearly. The only difficult task was choosing the best CD-burning GUI from about a dozen choices. My favorite was 'xcdroast', but there were many others that were capable of doing the job.
I know that I have a fiduciary responsibility to my shareholders to operate the company in their best interests
Yes, in their best interests as defined by your company charter. Some companies choose to have ethical clauses in their charters. Some shareholders prefer these types of companies...
Whereas here in the U.S., unethical companies are worshipped for being so successful in subverting laws and screwing customers and competitors.
I read once that only about 15% of Europe's population was very religious, whereas about 50% of America's population is. I wonder if there's a correlation there. (religion is just posturing to cover up a basic lack of morals and ethics.)
In other words, money is more important than ethics. This nicely sums up everything that's wrong with America.
Yes, it's really sad isn't it? The amazing thing is that so many Americans believe this.
Hmm. I doubt anyone will read this, but here goes. This can't work. Why? (you ask). Because of a little thing we call government contracts. I believe that that the government passed a law saying that licenses that expire are illegal and any software used or produced by a government contractor, for use by the government had better not be expiring. This means that probably 80% of the IT companies can't use software whose contracts expire.
Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
In the context of a CEO's role when the shareholders in question are interested in profit over ethics that's a fair statement.
But if (as pubjames says in another post) your company charter includes ethical statements and/or your shareholders make it known that profits take a back seat to ethics then obviously "money is more important than ethics" is not a fair statment.
The original point of contention here was whether a CEO's first duty is to the shareholders or not -- I contend that it is, pubjames has a little different take on it.
After that many Americans have another God, the one of their church, but it's the secondary one.
The "In God we trust" printed on every bill should be interpreted as "In Dollar we trust". Now that I think of it, it should even be printed this way :-)
Say I'm using a software product and am perfectly happy paying by subscription as it is a useful and productive product. What happens when the company I'm licensing the software goes out of business or decides not to support that product anymore?
It is still a much desired product and I still want to use it. What are my options at that point? I don't mind subscribing for good, useful software but I do mind not being able to run said product because the company that wrote it ceases to exist.
Once upon a time, software was primitive (PC, mainframe, makes no difference). Constant bugfixes and new/improved versions were a fact of life. No one ever thought the software companies were doing this just forose things would be free. In the PC world, you bought the base product once at full price and subsequent upgrades at a discount. In the mainframe world, you bought the product once and then paid 20% annually for "maintenance", which was essentially a subscription for any patches, new versions, and phone support. In this scenario, software companies had work to do, and a customer base willing to pay for it.
Then software "matured". Fewer bugs, more features than most people needed, not much of an incentive to keep upgrading. Y2K and excessive hardware/software costs put alot of mainframe systems into "legacy/do not upgrade" status. The few vendors who had mission-critical mainframe products really "milked" the customer base with whopper fees. Ask some of the IBM big-iron customers about CA (or IBM for that matter). It didn't take long for customers to revolt.
Today, we see this in the PC world. Many people are jumping off the upgrade bandwagon because they see insufficient benefits to justify the cost. Microsoft is a perfect example: they have a diminishing upgrade rate with each new release of Office. Why? Because the product is mature -- each new release is only a little better than the one before, and the customers are not really clamoring for new features.
Companies that have mission-critical PC products will no doubt use restrictive licensing to assure a revenue stream even if there isn't much of a demand for upgrades and bugfixes -- hence "Software Assurance (tm)" from Microsoft.
It always was and still is the responsiblity of the customer to figure out how to avoid getting painted into a corner and "milked". Look for competitive vendors, be willing to migrate to new products, consider open source alternatives. Plan an escape path for everything you do. The alternative is to get "milked" as a cash cow.
After that many Americans have another God, the one of their church, but it's the secondary one.
You're definitely misguided on this. There is no God in church; there's a god that is mentioned a lot there, but that's not the point of going to a church. In America, there's a very popular chain of social clubs called "church" that people ritualistically attend every Sunday. The point of these clubs is to be seen attending them (so that other churchgoers know you're part of their crowd, much like ravers attend raves so they can hang with that crowd), and to socialize with the people there. They don't really listen much to the sermons (otherwise they'd behave very differently outside the church).
So you think that ANY person can justify behaving unethically, just because their job demands it? So I assume you also believe it was OK for the Nazi death camp guards to help with the atrocities there, because that was their job.
'Tis sadly true there are the "Sunday Christians", but don't paint all Christians with that brush.
This basic plan has been going on for quite a long time now. It was old when the king got so greedy that he upset a bunch of barons and we got the Magna Carta. And don't think the barons were any less greedy. They just had to get together to get enough support to stand against the king. They even needed to get some support from the peasants (which lead to the House of Commons).
So. This is just a part of the way people act. The job of designing systems where they work in a better way (i.e., together rather that at loggerheads, etc.) is a branch of system analysis. When you design a system, the properties of the materials tells you what to expect when you arrange them in certain relations. A centralized point of control can be expected to result in a greedy bastard grabbing control of it, and using it to extort value from everyone dependant on it. This is just a part of the properties of the materials. The task is to design ways to eliminate all such positions. It is especially important when one is designing a system, because This is a general principle! It isn't just a characteristic of some small group of systems. If you write a check approval system, this principle is operative there. If you write a traffic control application, it is applicable there. It's not just large political systems. It's pervasive.
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I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
That's not a hollywood stereotype, that's what I've observed throughout my life. I'd paint most Christians with that brush.
I lost my trust in Norton when they trashed my hard disk during one of those "Upgrade you virus checker" episodes. I now evaluate them as a big expensive virus, with a great PR department.
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I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
OS upgrades? -- not just that. If some company keeps requiring software updates, it eventually outpaces your hardware. If anyone wants to keep using their same computer for more than 4 years (... computer lifespan? 5 years for macs, 3 years for win machines, more for linux?) it is virtually impossible to get more apps/diversify what you do on your computer. We have a mac ppc 166mHz tower at school, with pagemaker 6.5(?), photoshop 3.0, etc; if we ever wanted to, say, do some elementary rendering or CAD on the machine, for kicks, where could we get the 1997 age software? yeah, freeing of older softwares is a good thing. it extends the "life" of computers, to a certain extent at least.
&&stuff;
I am using windows 2k and I hate the memory resident crap that's on the market today. I think somethings, like a free command line/dos GUI based pregram will never go obsolete.
This is a perfect example of what I'm talking about. The old dos version is free, whereas you must pay for the windows version (which i've never thought of trying) Just running this every now and then to check your downloads is a good idea, but I for one don't need memory resident protection. I wish memory resident protection would go obsolete...
It's quite reasonable to limit the time that a product is supported, though not telling people before they purchase still strikes me as fraud.
... it's their choice. Both the vendor and the customer. (Here, of course, I'm assuming that there is no monopoly.) So if the customer doesn't like those terms, then he can go somewhere else.
It's quite different to explicitly limit the time period for which a piece of software can be used. If you don't announce this in large type on the packaging and on any ads, then it strikes me as a combination of fraud and theft. (Both, not somewhere in the middle.)
OTOH, if it is clearly announced where you read it before you pay over your money
In reality, however, any company that tried to adopt such tactics would go broke immediately, unless it was a monopoly. So only monopolies even attempt such schemes. The DOJ is supposed to defend us against such abuse, but they seem to be mainly (let me pretty this up) a fund extraction method used by the government in power against large corporations. (Well, they also act as a club to keep the smaller companies, and individuals, in line.)
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I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
You don't have the first clue about business, do you? The very clients whom you _aren't_ "ripping off" are themselves out there "ripping off" their clients. Its all a big money chain.
You can bet your ass that if I can get a company to give me more money due to their ignorance of technology, I will. And you know what? Its their own fault for being ignorant. I don't feel bad at all doing this because I know the people I'm taking to the bank are doing the exact same thing.
But an awful lot of people can get hurt in between the time they start this, and the time they die. And that's assuming that they can't buy enough laws to force it to work. The market isn't free when there's government regulation.
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OTOH, I must admit to having doubts about the free market. I've never seen one. Stories that I've heard from the old times when, if not free, it was a bit less regulated tell of boom and bust cycles even more extreme that since WWII. They tell of large coercive monopolies. They tell of employees hired with "company script" which could only be used at the company store. They tell of
Well, I'm just as glad that I've only heard of those things, rather than trying to live through them.
So now we have a regulated market, and that's created new problems. There are centers of control, and power-mad (unpleasant name) have siezed control of various single -point -of -failure positions. This is perhaps less bad than the situations that it was an attempt to prevent, but it still isn't good. So it needs a redesign. And before that, it needs for a way to be found to navigate these rapids. Just avoid building any new centralized control points when doing the redesign. Otherwise the replacement may be worse.
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I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Ah, the imaging to networked drives... I've never really tried that feature - I usually indulge in having a secondary drive in my systems that stores the cabs/drivers/images/etc. and so I've always had a local disk to dump things on.
As for the "Windows native" bit, that was a bit misleading - I blame the marketing guys as I would hope the engineers/programmers would know better. (As an ex-programmer, I've no lost love for sales/marketing folk)
As for the networking in a DOS environment, you're right - it ain't no picnic. I'm fortunate enough to come from a Novell 3.x environment and have mastered many tricks of networking from DOS - but it is still a gruelling task.
I hope for Power Quest's sake that they do not follow that same path as so many others where marketing/sales rule the company and half-truths and lies becomes their standard operating proceedure.
The Doctor is Out... (hunting the marketing menace!)
Those come in concrete! :D
My Jag does... It's originally designed for 95-06 Octane that they serve up over in Britain... I have to make do with 92 here. Luckily they tuned it down a little for the american models.
Most cars these days won't get a performance kick simply by putting higher octane gas in them, and might actually decrease their preformance. But, if you put lower grade fuel into an engine designed for Super, it WILL drop in preformance quite a bit.
Oh, and yes, although the sticker was Over $40k, I paid a little less...
Mind you, there could be some difficulty running the system 7 stuff on OSX, considering the WHOLE OS is removed and replaced with a Unix-based system- and still- Classic layer, anyone?
Graymalkin, to some extent you are making excuses for the Windows environment and trying to pass them off as standard operating procedure. You're correct in that domain, but why should anyone have to deal with that 'sunset' garbage? Apple has repeatedly proven that it's not necessary (and that choosing to NOT rape your customers is not the winningest of business decisions)
So which side are you on? Your vendor's- or your own?
What side am I on? What a joke. Apple is based in part on specifically NOT going with sunset clauses of any sort and doing the "right hting" when it comes out obsolete OSes. Reason being is their hardware lasts a long time. You can go and download OS 7.5 if you need something that works fine with your really old 68k based Mac. Apple isn't big on the OS software game and thus doesn't have a whole lot of incentive to go around screwing their customers over with retarded licensing.
If you're deciding to upgrade your software you simply should make sure everything is going to work for it. No matter which OS you're using. Should an OS developer support every conceivable piece of old software available for previous versions of their OS? That's ridiculous. WinNT dropped all of the 16-bit support that was bitchslapping the OS because all 16-bit code was stuck in the same virtual machine. When it crashed and locked up it rarely allowed the system to recover. WinNT dropped the cruft and moved forward. Apple dropped 68k support with System 8.5. Besides moving forward with technology, most of the time the OS developer has little to do with third party software crapping out. The guy I responded to is comparing his lack of forsight with a new OS to a sunset clause in software. I don't think Adaptec was sitting in their meeting saying "Oh hey, version 4 is going to come out well ahead of Windows XP which is currently still in an alpha relase stage, we better make sure that ECDC 4 doesn't work with Windows XP so we can take over the world!" He's also bitching over the fact a boxed copy of the software doesn't work with an OS that'd been officially released for a very short period of time. The box was packaged in bulk somewhere way before Windows XP was released, the code on the CD in the box was probably last revised nearly a year ago. Boohoo he has to download an update for it to work. The two of you are misconstruing that which is a true sunset clause and that which is just annoying.
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
I never said the free market solution would be quick or painless; in fact it will be neither. Given the number of people out there with programming skills, there will always be a substantial base of labor that will create knock-off products wherever the economic balance gets seriously out of hand. Example: At $500 per seat, M$ owns the desktop productivity market. But if they raise the price of Office XP to $5000 per seat, there WILL be competitors, and good ones at that. At that price, companies will be formed for the sole purpose of going after that market.
Even a monopoly does not operate in a vacuum. IBM once thought they had everyone locked into mainframes. Where is their big iron monopoly now?
I used to think that software patents would be the industry's way of stifling competition. But if you let the patent scenario play through to it's logical conclusion, it will become impossible to write ANYTHING without violating someone's patent. Once the patent holders get tired of suing each other, common sense will prevail.
I saw we let the software industry lobby do what they will do anyway, and assume that they will stick us with useless drivel like DMCA and SSSCA. The government is not going to provide meaningful relief to software consumers anytime soon. Hell, they won't even pursue meaningful corrective action against Microsoft.
If I can outperform my competitors when it comes to adopting an IT strategy that defends my business against monopoly lock-in and price gouging, then my competitors incur a higher cost than I do -- good for me. This may not be fair, but I am prepared to compete on this level. Is there any real alternative?
I disagree. One quality, or value, which I believe "those people" (presumably Pakistanis or Afghans) hold in high respect is honesty. They seem to think Americans are hypocrites. I believe it would do most Americans a bit of good to actually look up on the history of America. Thomas Jefferson would be a good place to start, I believe. After all, it was he, who tore apart the bible in the White House during his term and rewrote it to what he perceived to be the true story of Jesus, while still claiming to be a Christian.
Dijkstra Considered Dead
Stereotypes are a good way to categorize people when little information is known. This stereotype predates Hollywood, though.
I don't think the previous poster claimed all Christians are "Sunday Christians." I'm sure all aren't either, but all that I have personally seen fit that stereotype perfectly. A number of people I know fit the southern "Revivalist" stereotype (i.e. people who get up dance and shout).
Dijkstra Considered Dead
Software that is bought by me will never become illegal to use just because a company says so... WHO is going to know, let alone care that I have Win98 installed 10 years AFTER its release/death? How will "they" prevent me from this? My money paid for it, it's mine to use as long as I see fit to do so, and I will do so until I say it's time to change..NOBODY ELSE orders me to do this. What a fraudulent monopoly the software industry has over us....only THEY are allowed to dictate uses of their product that was sold to me/us, and I have NOTHING to say about this either....SINCE WHEN did I relinquish my PROPERTY to "them"? Come and get me Microsoft...come play with me and my arsenal of democracy...I DARE YOU to TRY IT! I'll have you cuffed and stuffed faster than the red ink in your pen dries on paper...TRESPASS is a crime and I have a very itchy finger too*S*! Screw the mutt....BANG BANG, sue ME! You sell; I buy, it's MINE FOREVER!
206.39.38.2, DDN-BLK-36, DOD NET INFO CENTER. 800.365.3642 206.36.0.0-206.39.255.255 NET RANGE.
As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.