I'm missing out on exactly nothing because, you see, I purposely avoid softwares that are hardware protected, and I've never felt the need for that.wagtunes wrote: So then what the hell would you do if someday every piece of software required a dongle of some sort? You'd stop working? Doesn't seem like a viable alternative.
But, to each his own. Shame, because you're missing out on a lot of great stuff.
And it's really not my fault if you can't understand the needs of other people. People using laptops probably outnumber people using fixed computers.
And the cataclysmic event you're talking about will never happen, else it would have already happened. And you know why ? Because most large companies (think Microsoft, Adobe, for instance) quickly found out that the hassle of dealing with customers who are having issues with dongles simply wasn't worth it. Still, companies that choose to go that route have to deal with it on a daily basis, and it uses up a lot of their resources so the revenue is kind of offset by this cost. Combine that with the loss of revenue due to people who will never try the software because of this kind of protection, the customers who walk away because of bad experience (and then talk about it on forums), and the loss of revenue of people for whom it's not even an option because they went mobile, and suddenly, this kind of protection becomes far less attractive.
I'm sure the Vengeance team have thought about all of this to take their decision.
