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I think it always will depend on your market or customer base. Changing/upgrading software is always painful and even more painful in some environments and companies. Fast release cycles can be disruptiveor . These disruptions often extend to your internal operations too, depending on how well feature creep is managed by marketing/management.

So, the classic ever true 'it depends' answer rings true again.

If you are really adding value to the product, then customers especially new ones will want it. The best case, is to remove the upgrade change pain, as in, it works the same, but better in obvious ways. Great.

show/hide this revision's text 1

I think it always will depend on your market or customer base. Changing/upgrading software is always painful and even more painful in some environments and companies. Fast release cycles can be disruptive or extend to your internal operations too depending on how well feature creep is managed by marketing/management.

So, the classic ever true 'it depends' answer rings true again.

If you are really adding value to the product, then customers especially new ones will want it. The best case, is to remove the upgrade change pain, as in, it works the same, but better in obvious ways. Great.