I'm using 4.0.1. It does not say what you indicate in the docs I have. Also the this version does not have that property.
I'm using 4.0.1. It does not say what you indicate in the docs I have. Also the this version does not have that property.
4.0.1 is like... over 3 years old. You can't blame something to behave incorrect if that behaviour was fixed only that you're still using an outdated version. Consider upgrading to 4.4.3![]()
I'm glad you suggested that. I work on a commercial product so we need the commercial license. It happens we looked into upgrading some months ago but, trolltech wanted us to pay for support for the intervening years we didn't upgrade.
That's the slimiest sales tactic I have ever heard of.
...and I have worked at Microsoft.
You can buy a new licence instead of renewing it. TT wants you to pay not for the support but for prolonging the licence during the period you have been using it without paying. It's a weird strategy, I agree, but they seem very strict (and coherent) about it. The normal rule is you have 6 months to renew the licence after it expires.
Look at it this way - if you rent a house and live in it, and suddenly stop paying but not stop living and then the owner comes and asks you to pay for the period of time you haven't been paying, you wouldn't be surprised, would you?
Every other product offers an upgrade license - with the only requirement being you actually own an older version. I don't have to show that I have upgraded to every version along the way. I hope you can see the rental house analogy is extremely labored and little more than rationalization. Software isn't rented.
Actually it is. You don't necessarily buy software, you licence it. The same goes with publishing books, playing music in public, etc.
Besides, it's the licencing scheme choice of Trolltech - by buying the licence you agreed to it. I don't like the scheme as well, but I have to live with it - they give you something on their terms. If you don't like those terms then don't accept them and don't use the product. But let's face it - the licence (and renewal) is really cheap considering what you get in return and how much can you earn with it.
Oh... and that's not true as well... very often you stumble upon a limitation that you can only upgrade a product if you have one of X earlier versions (and not any earlier version) and sometimes even in a required configuration (i.e. consider a downgrade from Vista to XP).Every other product offers an upgrade license - with the only requirement being you actually own an older version.
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