Else they will go extinct, that is why I was more than ok for SketchUp itself to move to the subscription model. If you look at other software then you will see almost all of them are moving to subscription. Now I dedicate less time to developing my tools which are going to be available as a subscription as well by the way. Instead, I have to use my time to work on jobs not related to SketchUp so I can support myself. I myself have had to stop developing plugins full-time because I was not able to make enough money selling them. I have seen this before on an Animation Plugin named ‘SimFonIA Animation Tools’ which was great but the developers had to stop because of lack of resources I suspect. The REAL problem I see is that developers would STOP developing SketchUp extensions because of a lack of resources and support from users not wanting to spend money on their work. $8.25 a month for Artisan is less than what you spend on food each day. So if you look at it that way subscription is not that different. For example, we went from Vertex Tools to Vertex Tools 2. What normally happens with the “Perpetual” license is that at the end of the year, the extension releases a new version. It is NOT fair for developers to dedicate many years working for us to only pay just $30 to $40 bucks. When it comes to software it makes sense it is a subscription because the developers constantly work on the code and customer support. Supports 3 axes modes (Local, View, World).New Tool-based UI to easily select the plane using inferencing.
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