Hi,
Subscription nearly forces you to upgrade continuously and also costs you a lot more.
I was always adamantly against subscription software, but since getting Fusion I've had to reconsider that stance. Firstly I pay about $500USD/year for Fusion Basic.
The closest competitors that have the same features are $1500USD to $2500USD and with optional annual fees of $250 or so on top of that.
By my reckoning I pay (in subscription fees) the same as buying a perpetual license every four years. I consider that fair value......not cheap.....not expensive, but fair.
Were I to buy RhinoCAM (Expert) (for $2500USD plus $400 annual) for instance, then I'd almost be a fool not to get annual updates, otherwise I'd find in five or eight
years time that my software had slipped that far behind that I'd have to buy anew. Not very appealing.
So, no, I disagree with your contention that a subscription 'costs a lot more', over a medium term I think they are cost competitive with a perpetual licensed software
I, for a couple of years, also bought Fusion Machining Extensions, at a cost of about $1500USD/year. This adds full simultaneous five axis, collision avoidance and tool path editing.
BobCad, RhinoCAM (Premium) ($10,000USD plus $600USD annual) and other are all $10,00USD for a perpetual license plus $500-$1500USD optional annual fees.
Simply I don't have the cash to buy a perpetual license outright, and so Fusions Machining Extensions subscription gave me capability that I could not otherwise afford.
I'm 100% convinced that Autodesk know this and price their products accordingly.
I still don't much like subscriptions, but it does mean I can have capabilities that would otherwise be out of reach for me. The final thing which swings me in favour of Fusion is that it has
an Electronics module, and I use it daily for business. Additionally it can do FEA simulation, thermal simulation and generative design. I make only limited use (read hobby level) use of these later
capabilities but I do use all of them. It is these extra capabilities all in the one platform that appeals.
I do well believe bet that Autodesk know and understand all of this , and this is how they are trying to maximize their profit, and I am, in part, providing it.....but in return I get to use a very good,
perhaps to the best or first-in-class software but pretty damned good, in a manner I can
afford.Craig