Read more.Strategy will help "Prepare an Industry - ready Workforce" that uses Autodesk products.
Read more.Strategy will help "Prepare an Industry - ready Workforce" that uses Autodesk products.
That is some fantastic news if you are eligible. Sadly since I'm not with a uni and I'm doing job specific qualifications then I doubt I will be eligible. But my flat mate is doing games design so perhaps we could organise it so I can use it but he may use my computer for it. Maya supports CUDA and he has an AMD card, unlike me! That's allowed... Right ?
Autodesk phoned me out of the blue in April (IT tech in a middle school - we still have them up here), so it wasn't American only. I assumed there was some catch, but nope, site license, full 2013 master suite or creation suite, nothing to pay now or later.
Working in education, where bespoke educational software seems to cost about 10x what its worth, and nothing comes free (other than Google Apps) I was staggered.
I don't think the home aspect was available in the original offer though.
Top marks Autodesk. Top marks.
this_is_gav... the catch is simple.... offer programs to schools to free so that future business clients have to buy autodesk software because that's what their staff are trained in. Autodesk are heading down rental only approach like adobe so get in early etc.
There are plenty of alternatives that are as good or better than Autodesk's offerings that come in cheaper so this is them keeping their status as the 'defacto' software.
It's part of the reason Adobe doesn't care too much about how much Photoshop gets pirated, they see it as getting the next generation of users and keeping their 'monopoly'. Not that there are many alternatives annoyingly.
And since when has Autodesk and Adobe competed with one another.... they cater for completely different fields.
I use 3ds Max 'legally', but up until I was given a license I pirated it, I would have happily paid a subscription had it actually been affordable to more than 3% of the population. I used to pirate Photoshop but since they now have a very cheap subscription option I go for that instead since it is affordable.
I work in the software development industry and it's all about "more expensive the software is, the more it'll get pirated" thing. The executives at Adobe assumed everyone just wanted free software (most of the people working their knew but these executives are the sorts of people who live very sheltered lives with lots of money.) but have come to understand that people will generally pay if they can A: try the software unrestricted for a short amount of time and B: if they can actually afford to pay ontop of feeding the family, bills, mortgage/rent, fines etc.
Adobe have gone in the right direction but sadly Autodesk haven't, they do have a subscription option which did perk my interest... until I saw that it was £175 a month which is rediculus!!
Now if it was £40 or even £50 a month I could get behind that but not at £175 a month, and that's for the most basic/cheapest option for one software package. Not ideal really since people will continue to pirate it until it's made affordable.
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