When you have people like me that aren't fast in designing their builds, like me. It may take me 6 months or longer to get 1 complete design done. Working on it in my spare time a few hours here and there. So when you goto a monthly subscription base the cost per hour use is way to high.
If the cost of the software out weighs it's usefulness then it's no longer a bargain.
Same way with AutoCad. When I could no longer afford to buy it, or justify the new subscription method it then became obsolete to me. I now use Draftsight.
But Autodesk isn't the only one doing this. I use photoshop, they recently went to a subscription method. They no longer support the software that I paid for, and want me to use the subscription method. Saving my work on the cloud. So guess what I don't use anymore?
You know what other subscriptions I don't get? TV.
This subscription method works for those that use the program 16 hours a day, and produce lot's of production board, and it works for Autodesk since they get a monthly income.
Right now, all I see is that the libraries are gone, ULP is gone which is leading me to believe the good software that I use is going to be useless in short order unless I get a subscription.