In what way? How are you doing the math on this?
I am not zoran, but I do work in a commercial print shop and we use design standard (photoshop, illustrator, indesign, acrobat):
cost of upgrade to newest version: ~600 EUR per seat every ~18 months (so far) == 33,33 EUR / month
cost of creative cloud: 64,99 EUR / month per seat
I do see a difference of ~30 EUR / month per seat.
The bells and whistles of online storage, fonts ... do not apply to us, as we do host things ourselves (and with a size requirements of 1TB the mentioned 20GB or 100GB for teams would not be an option anyway) and we bought the fonts we require as well. Fonts from customers are sent along with their files so that we can print them.
That may well be, but consider some of the things that you DO get with CC that you don't currently have
- FREE ACCESS to the ENTIRE Adobe Font Library! No more "Where is that font"?
We "own" Adobe Font Library already.
- 20G of free cloud storage! No more managing your own FTP or other servers for client communication.
As I already said, we do need to store about 1TB / month. This 1TB is always changing, but the overall size stays roughly the same per month.
- ALWAYS up to date. No more worrying about making sure your clients can't send you files that you can't open.
Even more worrying.
As there are not enough details for some kind of versioning scheme yet, I'll assume current year as version number.
Client sends file from InDesign CC 2013.
We open in InDesign CC 2014 and get a new text flow due to a redesigned text layout engine or new hyphen rules.
Or, for more "fun": there were some bugs in InDesign CS3 when you exported tables to PDF. These were resolved in CS4 and up; which means if we do get a file from CS3, we have to open it in CS3 so that the layout "stays" the same.
Now imagine that with a CC version and let's say 2 "version upgrades" per year ... 3 years down the road when not every customer did upgrade.
Never thought that would be a reaction, but _I_ think it's a GREAT idea!
I agree, that would be best. But some customers are simply not comfortable with exporting to PDF. We tried to teach them, we gave them settings, visited on site, showed them in 1on1 sessions - nothing could be done to get them to export as PDF. They update their CS sporadically.
One other thing that makes me extremely nervous: what if Adobe decides to stop doing business with me? I lose the ability to open and edit my files. In that regard I am totally dependant on Adobe's goodwill after I use CC versions of InDesign.
BTW I really look forward to what 3rd party plugin authors will have to say to CC versions. Some plugins get updated roughly a year after a new version of InDesign was released. I wonder how they will stay in business when updates are released more often and most users update early. Also I'd like to see how publishing systems like K4 and woodwing react this development. Interesting times ahead!
Kind regards,
Lars Pisanec