I was primarily an OSX user, but switched back to Windows earlier this year. I've been using WSL for a while now and it's working very well. I do all my Node/web dev/etc from the shell and use Visual Studio Code for editing. You can easily work with files under C:\ from WSL so basically it feels just like the dev I did on OSX.
I'm not disputing what you are saying, but what would you recommend they do between shows? For example, movie 1 ends at 2:38PM and move 2 starts at 3:00PM.
It depends though. Building a content-based site like a blog? Then not relying in JS makes perfect sense. But building an app? Than I think it is completely reasonable to require JS.
You hope that they won't be deleted but there's really no guarantee. I've been a CS user for some time now, but feel the product has become too expensive for the value I get out of it, so I'll just stick with an older version and be done with it.
Um, ok, fine, Dropbox could also delete your files. OSX could. Windows could. At some point, I guess you can't trust anyone, right? Point is - if you believe we (I work for Adobe) are lying about not deleting your files stored in CC, then just don't save them there. Or do what I do with Dropbox - I keep another copy on an external drive "just in case".
I was primarily an OSX user, but switched back to Windows earlier this year. I've been using WSL for a while now and it's working very well. I do all my Node/web dev/etc from the shell and use Visual Studio Code for editing. You can easily work with files under C:\ from WSL so basically it feels just like the dev I did on OSX.
I'm not disputing what you are saying, but what would you recommend they do between shows? For example, movie 1 ends at 2:38PM and move 2 starts at 3:00PM.
It depends though. Building a content-based site like a blog? Then not relying in JS makes perfect sense. But building an app? Than I think it is completely reasonable to require JS.
You hope that they won't be deleted but there's really no guarantee. I've been a CS user for some time now, but feel the product has become too expensive for the value I get out of it, so I'll just stick with an older version and be done with it.
Um, ok, fine, Dropbox could also delete your files. OSX could. Windows could. At some point, I guess you can't trust anyone, right? Point is - if you believe we (I work for Adobe) are lying about not deleting your files stored in CC, then just don't save them there. Or do what I do with Dropbox - I keep another copy on an external drive "just in case".
It works like Dropbox. The file is *on* your machine and synced to the cloud. You aren't opening large files via the net.
Your files are not deleted. You just lose the ability to open them in the CC apps themselves. You can easily open them in other compatible programs.
Also, education, enterprises, and government folks can customize how the CC software checks.
The "always on line" thing is wrong. The software checks once every 30 days.
There *is* educational prices. Currently 19.99 for students/teachers.