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Other than for testing purposes or plain inertia: Sometimes it's the older version of some program that is more suitable for what you need. Perhaps it's because of feature-creep in the later versions or because of some compatibility which the newer one doesn't support, or just because there isn't enough of a difference to upgrade for, etc.

As an example, I saw somewhere on SO (but can't find where) that Visual C++ 2005 supports code written for GCC better than Visual C++ 2008 does. For some this could be a good reason for staying with the 2005 version.

Is there a program (not OS) which you find you prefer or have to, use a previous version of even if you were offered the latest? What makes the older version preferable, what would need changing for you to upgrade?

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Please make the question or at least the title more specific. Regards – tamberg Nov 9 '08 at 18:23
I'm trying to understand when/where an application has been further developed or enhanced but to the end user this turns out to be disappointing enough that they won't use the new version. – Rob Kam Nov 9 '08 at 18:32
@Rob perhaps your question should be less 'make a list of applications you use that are old' and more 'why (generally) do you stick with older versions of application' – SCdF Nov 9 '08 at 19:31

18 Answers

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CodeSmith 2.6 is better than subsequent versions. It's also free.

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I'd have to go for the following:

  • DJ Java Decompiler - the older version is freeware. Plus, the newer version doesn't bring any improvements (I mean it's just a decompiler I don't need bling).
  • Pidgin - I use an older version. Search as you type doesn't work on the new versions and I don't want to downgrade GTK.
  • Magic Draw - I'm using version 5 so i'm 11 releases behind. It does what I need, no comments there.
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Outlook 2003 over Outlook 2007 -:)

Why? Speed!

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Windows XP rather than Vista.

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Vista is an Operating System, not an application. – Rob Kam Dec 26 '08 at 19:54
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PaintShopPro - after V7 that got steadily worse until it was so bad that Jasc ran out of ways to ruin it and had to be bought-out by Corel. There are no bounds to Corel's ability to ruin something, so it's carried on down since.

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I stopped at Jasc V9 and Corel X, both are equivalent (8 sucked but Jasc saved it somewhat with 9). – Jeff Yates Nov 9 '08 at 19:55
I have 7, 9, and X1 installed. Maybe 13 will be better. :) – bruceatk Dec 27 '08 at 18:59
Used PSP3 for 10 years until I figured out layers! "You are on day 2089 of your 30 day trial..." Now using store-bought PSP6 – gbarry Dec 27 '08 at 19:24
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I used Winamp 2.98 for years after 5.0 was out. I only recently upgraded to get Shoutcasts. I still haven't tried the newest version, 5.54? My main hesitation is feature creep; I just want to hear my music!

To that end, here is a great site for older versions of software! http://www.oldversion.com/

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I have to second that. – Dmitri Nesteruk Dec 26 '08 at 22:28
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Microsoft Office 2003 instead of Microsoft Office 2007. I don't like the "ribbon" instead of the toolbar. I also don't like that the default mode for creating documents or spreadsheets is not compatible with Office 2003.

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The latest version of office for windows is 2007. The 2008 version of for Mac. – shoosh Nov 9 '08 at 19:29
Thanks for the pointer. I've corrected my comment. Afterwards, I went into Excel and tried to find the version number, but in 2007 there is no "Help" Menu and when I click on the "?" Icon it didn't tell me what version it was. Why is this information hard to find? – Alex B Nov 9 '08 at 20:05
I have 97, 2003, and 2007 installed. I'm still lost in Access 2007, so I still use 2003. I do use Word and Excel 2007. – bruceatk Dec 27 '08 at 19:21
If you can find the options page, on the Save panel you can tell it to use the older versions for document saving by default. – Evan Jan 16 at 1:33
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Intuit Quicken or Microsoft Money - Do you really need to upgrade every year? They force you to upgrade every 3 years by disabling online support for versions older than three years.

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I'll avoid any "latest version" that's:

  • incompatible with the version in use by the majority of my coworkers or users,

  • less functional (removed features, added bugs) than the previous version, or

  • not offering enough marginal utility to justify the time, expense, or frustration associated with upgrading.

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My days as hunter and gatherer are long gone. I need to have reliable software, rather than the latest eye candy with broken functionality. (I still remember when Vista came out, and neither VS nor SqlServer ran without patches or service packs or preliminary upgrade service pack special edition preview betas)

As technological innovation cycles get shorter and shorter, I don't find the time to follow every latest trend, and catch up only if I see that it survived the first buzzword wave of attack.

At some point software simply has become "good enough" and has little room for improvement in the area the application covers.

That said, my personal PC runs Office 2000, Delphi 6 (if needed) and VC#05, but my development PCs are more up-to-date with Win03 and O2k3 and VS05, but still not "latest version".

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"At some point software simply has become "good enough" and has little room for improvement in the area the application covers." You're totally right - sane people would simply stop at this point. Strangely enough, the only product this has happened to is XP. – Dmitri Nesteruk Dec 26 '08 at 22:36
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I tried KDE 4.1 a few months ago, and was horrified on how simplified and "candied" they made it. So where I use KDE, I use earlier versions.

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I am surprised nobody has said it yet: Acrobat Reader.

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I use FoxIt Reader. Probably 10 times as fast as Acrobat. – Dmitri Nesteruk Dec 26 '08 at 22:24
Acrobat Reader is a good example of "creeping featurism". – Rob Kam Dec 27 '08 at 14:25
Foxit Reader for me also. – bruceatk Dec 27 '08 at 19:00
Foxit Reader for me too – ceretullis Dec 27 '08 at 19:17
OMG, Acrobat 4 works for 90% of docs out there; launches in 3 seconds on my 0.5 GHz PC – gbarry Dec 27 '08 at 19:21
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I find that quite a few of the programmes which I use are older versions. Usually because the newer ones have become ugly or slower with added features that I have no use for, while the older ones if still compatible, not crippled by the producer somehow (e.g. Yahoo IM) might be still more efficient in use.

Sometimes when it's the UI that has been given a new look to keep up with some currently in vogue style I'll try to find a way to turn this off to get back the OS default look.

Unfortunately in a couple of cases it means losing out on some newer features I'd like to make use of, amongst all the unwanted bloat.

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I'd have to use the word choose loosely, but one would be VB 6. I have to use VB 6 to maintain some legacy stuff. Sometimes when I need to do something and I already have VB 6 code lying around, I'll fire it up to get it done.

When I have to create a program right now that is flexible and fast I use PowerBasic 8. All the other tools that I have tried in the last 10 years just aren't as productive when you have to get things done right now. It compiles into a small fast exe that doesn't have any runtime dependencies. I have the complete development environment on my USB thumb drive.

At some point I expect C# to take over that spot in my toolbox. Visual Studio 2008 went a long way towards getting me there. It is so much faster to startup and use than any of the previous .NET versions of Visual Studio.

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Visio Technical 4.0, draws boxes circles, lines, and text. It's wonderful. Absolutely no "Office" required. Pre-Microsoft.

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Right now, the only application that I am consciously trying to stay with a lower version is Amarok 2, in favour of Amarok 1.4. Until 2.0 supports all the things 1.4 supports, I don't think I will be using it.

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Oh, if only I could up vote this more than once! Amarok 2 is alpha quality and not a patch on 1.x. – Evan Jan 16 at 1:36
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Now seriously. many of the older versions (especially Adobe Reader) contains critical security vulnerabilities that would make anyone's grandma shiver and go get her shotgun to obliterate the application as soon as possible.

Defending old versions because of bloat might be "defendable" but most of the time, a switch to something leaner (say Adobe Reader to the latest Foxit reader or Live Messenger to Miranda IM) would be a more secure way of doing it.

Let's keep patching and upgrading those applications out there. As soon as something ends up outside its supported life cycle - please for the love of =preferred deity= upgrade it. A good example is Windows 2000. Even the latest Winamp is easy to have "old school style" without much work - hence enjoying the freedom of actually playing media files with less fear of having your workstation turned into a zombie without your knowledge.

Oh yeah, no - I don't have an application I prefer an older version of. I really tried thinking of one though ^^

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Nero Burning ROM 6.

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