2020-07-06 - House drawing ------------------------------------------------------------------- It has been nice and rainy this weekend, after a pretty long period of dry weather. And i used the 'indoor' time to reinstall some very old version of Autocad on my old WinXP computer. I want to make a detailled drawing of my house in order to prepare some renovations i intend to do. And drawing my house has been on my todo list for at least a couple of years now. However, due to some severe procrastination i haven't done it yet. Maybe now it will change, and i can put myself to finally do it. I always quite liked AutoCAD, as it is a pretty polished and well tested piece of software that has proven itself over the years. And as of yet i haven't found an open-source counterpart that really provides the same functionality. Librecad is nice, but still lacking here and there (try to do some fancy trims, and compare to functionality to early versions of Autocad) However, that being said, i do not understand anything of the licensing models Autodesk is pulling these days. Currently everything is put in subscription models, where you pay a monthly fee to use the software. I bet, this is great for reducing piracy and to provide a steady income for Autodesk. The company would also argue that it's better for the end-user for all kinds of reasons. However, in reality for the end-user this model - Also pulled by Adobe, and many other software builders these days - is total utter crap. The user doesn't actually own the software anymore to use whenever wherever, but only subscribes to using it for a short while. With subscribing, the end-user immediately locks itself into having to keep paying for opening and modifying any of the drawings he makes with the software. If i have a subscription for AutoCAD 202x today, and i work on a really cool bunch of drawings, i have to again pay for a subscription again if i ever want to continue working on this drawing. I bet this subscription model works for big companies (which are probably the clients targetted by Autodesk anyway). But for smaller companies and silly hobbyists like me, this obviously doesn't work. However, since the earlier versions of Autocad are already excellent for drawing in, i'm more than happy to use the 20yr old version of Autocad, which i still have laying around on a CD. And although it doesn't have the fancy newfangled features the new versions has, it still does a damn good job for my simple drawing needs. And more importantly, as it's on an offline CD it can be reinstalled it and used whenever its needed, without having to pay for it again and again. Also, this 20yr old software is blazing fast on my 12yr old laptop! Honestly... Who needs all this new software anyway... I haven't even figured out all the features of this 20yr old software yet. It seems weird that there is not a more active market for ancient software nowadays. For me, i'd be perfectly happy to purchase a CD of Adobe Photoshop 5.0 to do my photo editing. I bet some 20yr old programs will still have most of the features most of its users utilize anyways...So why buy into these insane subscription models? If the Autodesks and Adobe's would offer to sell these 20yr old versions of the software at a discount price, i'm sure most users would go for the old versions.