![]() It’s a version of OmniFocus that runs on our computers, not yours. (That’s a good investment!)īut as I mentioned in January’s roadmap, OmniFocus for the Web is a different sort of product. With this model, we still have customers running software they purchased from us 20+ years ago. It’s designed for software that you run on your own devices, where you can buy something from us and run it for as long as you wish (so long as you keep a compatible system around to run it). We think our current licensing model meets a lot of needs, and we will continue to offer this model for licensing our apps: we prefer for customers to view our apps as an investment, not an expense.īut our current model doesn’t cover every situation. In my last blog post, I also described how we’re working on making it easier for businesses, schools, and other organizations to license and deploy our iOS apps. But over the years, with the introduction of new technologies like in-app purchases and updated policies, we’ve gained the flexibility we now enjoy which lets us offer trials, upgrade discounts-and even price protection (so recent purchasers get a free upgrade to a new major version of the app when it ships). ![]() When we started, the App Store only supported a pay up front model, which was far more limited than what we’d been used to with our own direct sales. As long-time readers know, we’ve worked very hard over the last ten years to implement our flexible, customer-friendly licensing model in the App Store. ![]()
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