It is really quite ridiculous to have users proclaiming "this is not a new product". It certainly is and it is already proving that. The product you purchased (Lite, Pro, or Studio) is still in production and is still supported and updated.
How is QU "already proving that?" How does it prove it's a new product?
When Adobe started bundling Bridge with Photoshop did anyone consider that a "new product?" I didn't think so. Adobe didn't think so - they charged current PS owners an upgrade price for the new version (the Photoshop, Bridge bundle).
Most users think of a "new product" in terms of what the product can do - to a user it has nothing to do with how much new code there is or how nifty that feature is they worked on. It's about function, to users.
So what is Qimage to users? For most users it's the best printing program out there. For some users it's also a handy/good RAW converter. From a big picture perspective, those are Qimage's core functions (I apologize if I missed something(s) but I don't think it's matters to my point).
What does Qimage Ultimate bring to the party, core function-wise? Nothing that I'm aware of - again, I'm sorry if I missed the big new core function. There were enhancements - from what I've read some of those enhancements are really, really good.
Even if there is some big core function that has been added to Qimage, it's still an upgrade - much like when Adobe bundled Bridge with Photoshop (with Bridge, they added the core functionality of an image browser (view images and edit metadata)). Qimage Ultimate to me is still the best printing program out there (I don't convert my RAW images with Qimage) - in other words, its core function did not change for me and many, many others.
Even if the code were rewritten from the ground up, it's still an upgrade to users.
The bottom line, if Qimage Ultimate really was a "new product" people would use Qimage Studio alongside Qimage Ultimate. Or Qimage Pro and Qimage Ultimate, etc. They would use both in tandem because the two products would serve different purposes (provide different functions). I don't think people use these products that way at all (in tandem). If you buy and use Qimage Ultimate, you very likely stop using Qimage Studio/Pro/Lite.
Conversely, when I bought Lightroom I did not stop using Photoshop. Lightroom really was a "new product."
We can't pay for truly new innovations like those (already found and to come) in Ultimate on free rides.
Of course not. We're not suggesting that at all.
With Lite, Pro, and Studio, you get free upgrades to the product you purchased for the life of that product. That's what "free lifetime upgrades" means. It doesn't mean that everything I do in my lifetime will be added to the product you purchased for free!
Of course not. We're not suggesting that at all.
Sooner or later you have to admit that what you are doing now is well beyond the scope of what people purchased. It's then that a new product is born.
This is where you lose many of us. The logic doesn't sync with reality. When I bought Qimage Studio it was the best printing program I had tried. That scope has not changed. Not for me, not for many of us. A new product is "born" if it provides a whole new core function(s). It's a "new product" if it is meant to be used alongside the "old product," not replace it. A replacement is an upgrade.
Maybe I'm missing what you're saying. Show me an example in the photo software world of what you're talking about. Show me a software product from another vendor that you see as a good Qimage Ultimate "new product" example.
Qimage Ultimate is a new product with pricing and upgrade policies that make Ultimate as much a bargain in 2010 as Qimage and its free lifetime upgrades were in 1998!
Well, I don't agree with the "new product" part but I agree that it is a bargain for new users. Not so much for existing users.
Like egale said, I'll use Qimage Studio until it works no longer and then I'll buy the best printing program for the buck (probably QU or it's replacement). That is the cost effective choice you're forcing me to make. If that's five years from now, DDI lost $100 from this user. I would rather give you a reasonable upgrade payment and the $100. You're a tough guy to give money to Mike.