ohkphoto
Snow White
A new "subscription plan" to CC for photographers. Adobe Creative Cloud for Photographers Includes Photoshop, Lightroom, and More | Popular Photography
I don't like it either but I'll probably fold and do it before time runs out.... $10/month isn't a bad deal, but I'm still not a big fan of how all this is set up.
I am old...
I'm not liking this subscription business. Microsoft word used to be standard/preloaded on computers. Then you had to buy the program for over $100. Now it's $100 a year to "borrow" the program, bunch of BS. Hopefully everything doesn't go this way, but it probably will.
Of course, everybody is entitled to their own opinion...but in your case, 95% of what you just wrote is technically incorrect.
You might want to take a step back, and goto Adobe's web site, and read their FAQ... Nobody is forcing you to do anything. You don't work in the cloud, your work and programs remain on your computer, and they do NOT stop, and no one denies you access to your files...
It appears to me you're BOTH right...Doesn't that mean no paid validation, no software function?
It appears to me you're BOTH right...
Adobe's CC "solution" is hybridized in that the applications you subscribe to reside on your computer so you don't need an active Internet connection to use them; whereas in true Cloud-Based computing the application itself would be stored on a web-server, *not* your computer.
In this latter scenario, if you want access to the application, you must have an active Internet connection *because* the app itself is web-based.
What Adobe is doing is having it's subscription-based software "phone home" to the Adobe Mother-ship once in a while to make sure you're paying the rent. If Adobe determines your check has bounced, you get locked out of your software, even though it is stored on your local computer.
In what I see as an attempt to soften the blow, Adobe is offering something like 20GB of free online, "Creative Cloud" storage with your paid subscription. Convenient, I suppose, but not such a big freakin' deal when you consider even a free Flickr account offers you 1TB of the same.
Of course, everybody is entitled to their own opinion...but in your case, 95% of what you just wrote is technically incorrect.
You might want to take a step back, and goto Adobe's web site, and read their FAQ... Nobody is forcing you to do anything. You don't work in the cloud, your work and programs remain on your computer, and they do NOT stop, and no one denies you access to your files...