> I can also buy O365 Home Premium (5 user including thick apps and Skype credit) for less than $10 per month ($99 NZD per year) -- and that's for 5 users.
I have an Office365 subscription that I don't use.
Their OneDrive client is shit and they don't do file version history, which means that files are very vulnerable to mistakes and ransomware.
With OneDrive you basically get exactly what you're paying for.
> Microsoft are consistently adding value to their O365 offering
One way of looking at that is the quality of their offering is so bad that the only way to go is up.
If you objectively analyse their price, Office 365 is in fact overpriced. For example I spent about $20 on Apple's Keynote and it was a one time fee that happened 3 years ago. It's still the best presentation software for me.
And personally I have important data, like a big family photos archive, a lot of documents, presentations I did, stuff I found interesting, etc. The cost of losing it would be pretty high.
I'm very frugal in general, but I don't mind paying for email and storage.
I have an Office365 subscription that I don't use.
Their OneDrive client is shit and they don't do file version history, which means that files are very vulnerable to mistakes and ransomware.
With OneDrive you basically get exactly what you're paying for.
> Microsoft are consistently adding value to their O365 offering
One way of looking at that is the quality of their offering is so bad that the only way to go is up.
If you objectively analyse their price, Office 365 is in fact overpriced. For example I spent about $20 on Apple's Keynote and it was a one time fee that happened 3 years ago. It's still the best presentation software for me. And personally I have important data, like a big family photos archive, a lot of documents, presentations I did, stuff I found interesting, etc. The cost of losing it would be pretty high.
I'm very frugal in general, but I don't mind paying for email and storage.