• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
    link
    32 years ago

    As I said, I find proprietary software can be useful. I use proprietary apps myself, but I always want to make sure I have a migration path from these apps. If the vendor goes out of business, or changes their business model in a hostile way such as putting adds in the app, etc. I want to be able to stop using it.

    • @Zerush
      link
      -12 years ago

      There is always the possibility of having to migrate to alternatives, either because the manufacturer goes bankrupt, changes the business model or belongs to one of the thousands of obsolete, neglected or abandoned FOSS. My goodness, the number of times that I have changed the software and the OS in the quarter of a century that I use computers, no one is spared from this. Regarding IrfanView, which I took as an example before, it is still in good health, although I have finally replaced it with a FOSS app that is the closest to this viewer, although only partially, Nomacs - Image Lounge, which has the same functions, except for the ability to play multimedia files and some secondary functions, but for this I already have VLC. But as I say, in near future I have to regress to IrfanView, because the Nomacs project seems abandones and the official web has expired.

      You can still download it in Sourceforge and Github

      https://sourceforge.net/projects/nomacs/

      https://github.com/nomacs/nomacs

        • @Zerush
          link
          12 years ago

          Yes, there are a lot of imageviewer out there, but none of these are feature rich as IrfanView. Through all the years is still without a real alternative, not even Nomacs, whic is the closest and half death.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
            link
            12 years ago

            Once you get used to a piece of software it is a pain to switch your workflow to another for sure.

            • @Zerush
              link
              12 years ago

              True, but as I said, this can happen with any software sooner or later. Sometimes it can be a shame, but the computer world is like that.