03-08-2023 06:17 AM
@Ants_at_work wrote:
Some of my few customers do transfer to Delphi (RAD Studio). It also has partly graphical IDE like Visual Studio, can compile code much smaller than Python, executes faster than Python, can use Python libs (core numpy is written in C++ anyway), has many connectivity libs accumulated over the years, and is able to produce cross-platform code.
That's a great tool to know about, thanks for sharing! I've begun a couple year arc to derisk myself from being only LabVIEW. They also aren't making the mistakes NI is with there licensing, they offer a perpetual license and have a carve out for very small companies.
03-10-2023 10:57 AM
I had a 3 year maintenance licence, so I had not heard about the move to SaaS. I received the first email a few weeks ago, and I thought the price quoted was for a 3 year maintenance, which I was going to pay.
I then paid a little more attention and noticed that for what I was paying for 3 years to actually own the software, I would be paying in 1 year, and have no long term rights to it.
I inquired to make sure I understood correctly, and was told, that is the new model.
I complained - stating what I wrote above. In addition, they are eliminating access to any downloads you actually own - so I had to make sure I download all the current versions of the software, while I still can.
I decided to not upgrade the software, and stay at my current 2022Q3 version. If I have to do any new projects, I will use C# / Visual Studio. May take a little more time, but I think it will be a much better choice going forward than what is being forced on us here.
03-10-2023 11:09 AM
I have frozen my license as well. If a customer requires a version past 21, they will be obligated to pay the rental fee, and given the understanding that the fee may recure if continued support is required.
I have no confidence that new features in the software will compel me to start renting a seat. My world is machine vision, and I get the feeling that NI has abandoned any future development in that area.
There may be some scrappy upstart company that will rise to fill the gap in software. Hardware is a little tougher. NI has a great range of well built hardware products, but their inability to manage supply chain is hurting them as well. I'm willing to conceded that Covid was a major factor, but that excuse will not be valid much longer.
'tis a sad thing to watch.
03-10-2023 11:21 AM
@RS7 wrote:
I had a 3 year maintenance licence, so I had not heard about the move to SaaS. I received the first email a few weeks ago, and I thought the price quoted was for a 3 year maintenance, which I was going to pay.
I then paid a little more attention and noticed that for what I was paying for 3 years to actually own the software, I would be paying in 1 year, and have no long term rights to it.
I inquired to make sure I understood correctly, and was told, that is the new model.
I was of the impression that, upon purchasing the new SaaS version, that you'd be given a *new* license, not a replacement. Thus in your case, you'd actually have your 2022 license permanently, and a second SaaS license going forward. Is that not what you were told?
I complained - stating what I wrote above. In addition, they are eliminating access to any downloads you actually own - so I had to make sure I download all the current versions of the software, while I still can.
This seems bonkers to me... why don't they provide the installers for anyone anywhere, and let the license handler do the work? Can anyone shed some light on that one? It seems like such a tiny, trivial thing to not let people download their old software. Surely the burden on their download servers can't be THAT high to have someone download an older version of software.
03-10-2023 11:37 AM
@RS7 wrote:
If I have to do any new projects, I will use C# / Visual Studio. May take a little more time, but I think it will be a much better choice going forward than what is being forced on us here.
Until Microsoft decides that their bottom line is not feeding their shareholder expectations enough anymore and limits access to Visual Studio too. 😁
Soon everybody will be programming GCC I guess.
03-10-2023 11:44 AM
@BertMcMahan wrote:
I was of the impression that, upon purchasing the new SaaS version, that you'd be given a *new* license, not a replacement. Thus in your case, you'd actually have your 2022 license permanently, and a second SaaS license going forward. Is that not what you were told.
That's partly true. You keep the ownership of your perpetual license, yes. But the official download site only lets you access those downloads with an account bound to a current SSP or subscription.
You can find that unfair, but you wouldn't expect to get disks or other media to be shipped to you without a valid support contract either if it was still distributed on such media.
So you should save the downloads in a safe place and then you still may not be able to activate it on a new computer in a few years. Those license servers that allow to activate the license on a computer will not keep records of the serial numbers and associated accounts until the end of the universe. 😁
03-10-2023 01:28 PM
@RS7 wrote:
I had a 3 year maintenance licence, so I had not heard about the move to SaaS. I received the first email a few weeks ago, and I thought the price quoted was for a 3 year maintenance, which I was going to pay.
...
I decided to not upgrade the software, and stay at my current 2022Q3 version.
I'm in a similar boat with NI pricing us out of our renewal cost. But I think 2022Q3 is probably a decent version to lock in at. It has Windows 11 support, and cRIO and RT are apparently 64-bit. Windows 11 support will likely be through 2027 or so if I had to guess, since Windows 10 support is expected through 2025. The 64 bit tools is something we've wanted to standardize internally but RT was holding us back.
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03-11-2023 12:21 PM - edited 03-11-2023 12:22 PM
Yes - when receiving a subscription, the old license would be permanently present, but at that fixed older version.
If I were to use the new license to create any new software, that software would not be usable with my old license. Hence my comment that the old license would be worthless (if you use the new SaaS license).
The Autodesk model was much better-I got the software subscription for <1/3 the price of a new subscription - eternally, but my old perm licenses were invalidated. This way, I was "credited" for the initial outlay of $ to buy the perm license
03-12-2023 04:37 AM - edited 03-12-2023 04:54 AM
@RS7 wrote:
Yes - when receiving a subscription, the old license would be permanently present, but at that fixed older version.
I was in the understanding that this isn't the case. Wasn't completely clear in the communication, they mention a 'transition of subscription'. Got me fooled. But checking back now in the 'small print' it says that indeed this is the case:
03-12-2023 05:43 AM - edited 03-12-2023 05:48 AM
I don't see how Test Workflow is cheaper, especially if I need only LabView.
It's so easy to work in the sales.