![]() ![]() ![]() Which gives you access to the latest versions and updates continously, until you opt-out. Visual Studio also has an annual MSDN subscription model too, of course. Which is quite similar to how a Xojo license appears to work now. Visual Studio’s stand-alone licenses don’t permit a full version upgrade, without of course purchasing a new license (or sometimes a discounted upgrade license, which required the media of the original version to activate).īut at least with those “stand-alone” licenses you can continue to use that originally purchased version basically forever, for building & compiling existing and new projects. But I’ve found those updates were pretty infrequent in the past. With Visual Studio, when you do a one-time purchase for a particular version, e.g., VS 2010, you would get free update “patches” for that version until they stop making updates (typically when the next version is released, a year or two later). The Xojo subscription model is “somewhat” similar to MS Visual Studio, when it comes to Visual Studio’s one-time “stand-alone” licenses.
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