Ed Spiruell said: "I only found a reason to buy Graphics Converter after the demo-use license." (or something like that.)
That's exactly what the developer intended. That's why the software still runs after a 30s wait. And if you now buy a license or continue to use the software for free: That's all he wanted.
OmniWeb/iCab: I bought a license to OmniWeb, mostly because they have been entertaining me so well in past and present. OmniWeb 2.x/3.x was the only browser available back when I was using Rhapsody on my PC and Mac OS X Server 1.x on my PowerMac 9500/200. And when Mac OS X 10.0 (4K78) came out, IE sucked so much that OW was still the only way to go. I'm supporting them because they're a poster child of a software development company. What happens if you don't pay for OW? You are not disturbed while surfing the web. Nice one. I even sometimes remove my license which I paid for just to see the funny comments. And then I reenter it because I remember that I paid for it.
Non-public Betas: They're warez. Definitely. Yes, I have a license for Photoshop 6.0, I don't have one for 7.0 because there aren't yet any to buy. It's illegal to use the 7 beta, I shouldn't even be able to find a copy. But I guess noone will hunt down a user who paid licenses so far, would they?
Pirated Fonts: Yes, that's a big problem for many companies. It's such a big problem that I mainly switched to using specialty fonts only for customers willing to pay for the fonts, too. It's a drag, because even more people don't look at good fonts as something to pay for. For those willing not to pay for the fonts: There are *a lot* of good copies around the net that are freeware. They might look a little bit different than the originals, but it's the way to go if you want to be free.
jokell82 said: "and that will never change."
This one makes me angry. Really. I guess that phrase oughta be punished with a lot of soft pats with a hard stick. Remember Bill Gates saying a PC will never need more RAM than 640KB? That was similar.
It's especially strange to say such a thing in the face of so many good open source developments. This is about to change. It's already changing. It might take years for OpenOffice.org to complete an office solution that can grab customers from Microsoft, but when it's ready and *does* start to do just that, it will take off. If you really *have* an opportunity to switch to a totally free and open source office solution that can really compete with a solution that costs a hell of a lot of money and comes from a company that has an image like that: You will. 'Do you want this for free or do you want to pay 300 bucks?' You'll pick the free one. The Gimp may not really be a competitor to Photoshop right now, but it *is* really a competitor in some areas. Those areas maybe where people rather 'steal' Photoshop than buy it. The Gimp has been improved over the years and will go on to be improved. It has and will have its share of the cake in graphics design.
Apache. It's the world's web server. You surfing the net? Most probably you're getting pages from a server platform that is open source and completely free. 'Course there's Microsoft IIS, but it sucks big time (both your money and your brain) as soon as you have to maintain more than one virtual webservers.
Perl. MySQL. It's ruling the web, basically.
So why does this not apply to the Print industry? Because it hasn't yet really been tried. I'm sure, if one day someone starts to make an effort, a really interesting solution will spring out of it. And where Quark XPress document solutions cost thousands of dollars plus the multiple client software for a layout/print office, this solution will be free. And of course it won't provide the exact same things from the beginning. But the price alone (free as in beer) will make it attract young/small/poor offices and let them provide good work where before they would've be dead or illegal.
The industry is always changing, albeit slowly. Who would've thought that IBM would promote Linux 7 years ago? Everyone was either laughing about such a thought or they would've asked what Linux was. And today MS is talking about 'the biggest threat' when they talk about Linux. They scream 'communism!', which is a terribly wrong comment to make if you want to attack Linux, because Linux has all the BEST of communism without the drags, where MS is all the WORST of capitalism WITH all the drags.
In five years, the web will be different. Media production will be different. (I still believe that Adobe will lead there, though.) In five years, our computers will be quite different. (1992 there was the Quadra 950 [
http://www.apple-history.com/quickgallery.html?where=950 ] with a 33 MHz 68040 processor. 1997 there was the PowerMacintosh 9600 with a 350 MHz 604p Mach 5 processor. Quite a difference indeed. We're now at Dual 1 GHz G4s with AltiVec. We're on Mac OS X. Times do change. So do business models and software licenses.