Comment by kgwgk

Comment by kgwgk 2 days ago

10 replies

The reasonable price was $600 in 2000 which is over $1000 adjusted for inflation. That's four years of subscription, the useful life of a perpetual license may not be much more than that.

Mistletoe 2 days ago

No I pretty much still just need Photoshop features from 2000, 25 years later. That’s $24 a year instead of the current price of almost $24 a month.

  • steveBK123 2 days ago

    Your perpetual license on a fixed version of Photoshop would not have been transferrable across OS/compute generations for 25 years.

    In practice most longtime Photoshop users paid the $600 once and some $200~ upgrade cost every 2-4 years. Adjusted for inflation its same or more than what you pay now.

    If you think you'd be fine now with 25 year old Photoshop features you maybe forget how basic the product was compared to today. Further besides OS compatibility there were file format / camera raw version additions made over time that you'd have wanted.

    • ghaff 2 days ago

      And there are both cheaper proprietary programs and even free open source programs if they care that much. There are a lot of way cheaper software options, especially on the desktop, in many cases than there were 25 years ago.

  • [removed] 2 days ago
    [deleted]
  • 1123581321 a day ago

    You can get 2000-level Photoshop for free from many sources now, so you shouldn't be complaining about cost increases. Paid software has moved upmarket and bundled. The work done by people who need paid software has become more complex and vertically integrated (productivity increase.)

  • kgwgk 2 days ago

    Are you also happy running Windows XP or Mac OS X 10.1 (Puma) which seem to be the last versions officially supported? (I guess on Windows it may have worked in some form or another longer than that but surely it doesn't work anymore on Windows 11 which is the only version currently supported.)

  • tikhonj 2 days ago

    If that's all you need, there are free alternatives that should be more than sufficient today.

  • paulpauper 2 days ago

    aren't there open source programs that have caught up to early 2000s era photoshop?