Not sure I understand the point here. What does "hold their value" have anything to do with $$$/quality, $$$/utility, etc etc? Are people buying software with the thought in the back of their head "well, if I unload this at the end of the month, at least I'll make my money back..."??? You should buy software based on it's value TO YOU, not somebody else. Then it's simply a matter of: is there enough XXX here (quality, features, support, longevity, etc.) to justify the cost?BBFG# wrote: Linplug has some synths that definitely interest me. I just see that in the market place, they don't seem to hold their value and they also seem hard to move. So the market decides, and even though Spectral is not in its frenzy opening stage, it still is on the watch list for many of us. Just not at that price.
$150 for a top quality software synth or sample library or whatever is dirt cheap. Whenever i go to the market to buy milk, bread, and toilet paper, my wallet seems to end up $50 lighter. Fill the tank? That'll be another $50. At least with the quality software you get many years of good use out of. Unike toilet paper. Now, if this stuff was in the "overpriced protools TDM plugins" range of pricing, then I'd agree. But we're talking $100 vs $150 here, not $200 vs $800.


