Even among my entire household, including the retired devices that haven’t been recycled or rehomed yet, I’ve got a grand total of seven iDevices, only four of which are in active use-and one of which is so old and decrepit that I haven’t even been able to power it on. Looking at that plan, it’s not exactly an attractive option for those of us with only a handful of devices. I missed that reference the first time around. Is the only previous point in this entire thread when anyone has discussed a license option that doesn’t involve the permanent slots. I’d probably go with the iMazing Family Subscription license. Of course, none of these are as nice as the legacy licenses, which were licensed for an unlimited number of devices on a fixed number of computers, but it doesn’t look like that’s an option anymore, for any price. If you are frequently upgrading your devices, then a subscription ($90/year for up to 15 devices) may be more economical. If you have a small number of devices that don’t change very often, then the device license ($40-130 for 1-10 devices, unlimited upgrades) may work best. You can pick the terms that work best for you. It’s still slot based, but you’re paying for 15 slots and they reset each year when the subscription renews. They also offer a “Family Subscription”, which has an annual fee for up to 15 devices. You pay a perpetual license for a fixed number of devices. the “Device License” is the only one that works this way. Please take another look at the different licenses. Even a regular subscription is a better choice than this. There are better ways to ensure a continuing revenue stream than making people pay again solely because a device has changed. Tying a license to a specific device permanently is, in my view, a short-sighted idea that can only backfire.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |