MentaL
Well-known member
Holy moly IPB is too expensive.

Holy moly IPB is too expensive.
My prediction for the first HYS: a new ACP payment checkout button so admins can easily pay the $9k fee to upgrade Giphy.
This sounds like a good reason not use it.Meanwhile Invision pushes alpha and beta releases almost weekly.
Surely you can come with a more intelligent reply.This sounds like a good reason not use it.
What do you mean?Surely you can come with a more intelligent reply.
Haven't been following Invision since they deprecated IP.Board. Is there plan to get rid of add-ons altogether or are they planning on introducing something else? At that point, sounds like they are just going closed source with no intent to have any 3rd party stuff?(They are quite clear that monkey patching, which is essentially what XF proxy classes are doing, is an out of date technique.)
Haven't been following Invision since they deprecated IP.Board. Is there plan to get rid of add-ons altogether or are they planning on introducing something else? At that point, sounds like they are just going closed source with no intent to have any 3rd party stuff?
Matt - IPS Management said:[Post] Correct, there is less opportunity to overload/hook into/touch Invision Community 5. If you can give me some examples of why you'd want to overload those methods, we can help guide you to newer tools or understand why there is a need and consider adjustments to the dev toolkit.
Monkey patching (code hooks) were convenient but the cost was very high in that we couldn't significantly alter our code without destroying most existing...
omg, this recursive meme totally hypnotizes my little brain into a suitably vacant stare. Love it!
Oh my are we doing this again?According to the announcement on Sept 13:
"To keep you engaged and informed throughout the development process, we'll be sharing Have you seen...? posts more frequently."
60+ days and zero 2.4 HYS posts.... #justsayin
I think that's an unfair business practice, shame they're getting away with it. Yet another reason not to go Invision.if you don't renew for 2 years the licence is no longer renewable.
I agree. It is a bit unfair indeed. But then again, you know what you sign up for when purchasing a license. And honestly, 2 years is still a good amount of time. If people can’t renew in that time, that’s on them. But I’ve had my license since 2011, and also had a period where I didn’t use it for 2 years. It would definitely suck to lose an investment like that. Luckily I didn’t pay the current price.I think that's an unfair business practice, shame they're getting away with it. Yet another reason not to go Invision.
It has to be remembered that they push out releases very regularly (during 4.x we saw monthly releases), and their argument, such as it is, is that the regular release cadence is only possible because people keep paying, and that they feel someone who only pays every few years to renew just to get the latest features is unfairly benefitting versus the people who keep renewed - and it's not paying the bills for delivering those features.I think that's an unfair business practice, shame they're getting away with it. Yet another reason not to go Invision.
Might as well just move to a subscription model at that point.Also worth noting, Woltlab at one point talked about 'if your licence lapses, the software stops working' but I don't remember if they reversed course on that.
They'd quite like that, but apparently the folks who aren't on a cloud plan have a problem with that.Might as well just move to a subscription model at that point.
Sounds plausible that it could be their reasoning, but then they're just trying to prop up an unviable business model and doesn't change that it's an unfair business practice by screwing over their customers. If I was looking to buy this product, I'd think twice once I saw that clause in it.It has to be remembered that they push out releases very regularly (during 4.x we saw monthly releases), and their argument, such as it is, is that the regular release cadence is only possible because people keep paying, and that they feel someone who only pays every few years to renew just to get the latest features is unfairly benefitting versus the people who keep renewed - and it's not paying the bills for delivering those features.
Also worth noting, Woltlab at one point talked about 'if your licence lapses, the software stops working' but I don't remember if they reversed course on that.
I don't remember where I saw it but Matt M (one of the founders) actually said this, it's not me speculating that this is their reasoning.Sounds plausible that it could be their reasoning,
Interesting question. Though there's enough precedent that I suspect it wouldn't go very far in practice.It wouldn't surprised me that if some unlucky customer who wanted to use such an expired license and was told to pay full price again, that they'd win in court and Invision would have to change their terms and condition to remove these unfair clauses.
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