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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday January 21 2017, @11:52AM   Printer-friendly
from the slow-death-of-proprietary-software dept.

EAGLE, The Easily Applicable Graphical Layout Editor is an ECAD (electronic computer-aided design), proprietary software for creating printed circuit boards. Cadsoft, the company that created it, sold EAGLE to Autodesk in June.

Hackaday reports

Autodesk has announced that EAGLE is now only available for purchase as a subscription. [Previously], users purchased EAGLE once and [could use] the software indefinitely (often for years) before deciding to move to a new version with another one-time purchase. Now, they'll be paying Autodesk on a monthly or yearly basis.

Before Autodesk purchased EAGLE from Cadsoft, a Standard license would run you $69, paid once. [...] Standard will [now] cost $15/month or $100/year and gives similar functionality to the old Premium level, but with only 2 signal layers.

[...] The next level up was Premium, at $820, paid once. [...] If you [now] need more [than 2] layers or more than 160 [sq.cm] of board space, you'll need the new Premium level, at $65/month or $500/year.
New Subscription Pricing Table for Eagle

[...] The [freeware] version still exists, but, for anyone using Eagle for commercial purposes (from Tindie sellers to engineering firms), this is a big change. Even if you agree with the new pricing, a subscription model means you never actually own the software. This model will require licensing software that needs to phone home periodically and can be killed remotely. If you need to look back at a design a few years from now, you better hope that your subscription is valid, that Autodesk is still running the license server, and that you have an active internet connection.

The page has well over 100 comments, with many saying the equivalent of "Goodbye, EAGLE; Hello, KiCAD".
KiCAD is gratis and libre, cross-platform, has been adopted as a software development project by nerds at CERN, and has seen marked improvement in recent years.

Previous:
CERN is Getting Serious About Development of the KiCAD App for Designing Printed Circuits
Scripts Make the (Proprietary) Cadsoft EAGLE-to-(FOSS) KiCAD Transition Easier

Some time back, anubi and I conversed about how EAGLE has been DRM'd for quite a long while.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21 2017, @09:50PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21 2017, @09:50PM (#457105)

    my 2D stuff is done on DraftSight and [...] Corel

    It's a shame that the complications of the dual-license of Qt (before Nokia bought Trolltech and made that Free Software) hampered the wide popularity of QCAD.

    It also took a while for the other various FOSS CAD packages (colored baby blue)[1] [wikipedia.org] to gain features and their popularity suffered.

    [1] DraftSight is missing from that page.
    As a user, you may want to add that with all the particulars.

    vrkalak was once a regular contributor to the Linux Mint forum.
    He's a (now retired) architect who made a point of mentioning that he made his living using only FOSS.
    An Architect Identifies The Best Linux-Compatible Mechanical CADs [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [linuxmint.com]
    The original title of that page mentions (closed-source freeware) DraftSight.

    Corel

    It makes me wince when guys running a FOSS OS use closed-source payware.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]