![]() For subscription that means you have signed into your account on two given machines. For Classic that means you added the serial number based license to two particular machines. Both the permanent ‘Classic’ license and the subscription allow you to have two machines that can use SketchUp. What Mike says about being allowed to use SketchUp on three machines is technically possible, but not what the license covers (as I understand it).Note that it isn’t permanent support or updates, if you don’t renew support you would need to stay on that latest version, and come to the forum to get help. So, the license is a permanently working version of the latest SketchUp that you have activated, but any versions that are installed on the same machine will continue to work, and you may well have a license for versions that are later than the one you are currently using. If you renewed at the end of January 2019, you would have the 2018 version, soon got the 2019 version, and still be eligible for the 2020 release before your M&S ran out. If you happened to renew in late November 2017, you had the recently released 2018 version, but had run out of support before the 2019 version was released. What updates that then gets you depends on the version release dates. When you pay $120 to renew M&S you are paying for 12 months of support (phone, email, these forums). ![]() Also, you were obliged to be paying for the first year of M&S, hence the price of $695. ![]() I’m not sure how support was done, I never needed it at the time! Many years ago that was changed to be $575 of the cost is SketchUp, and $120 is maintenance and support (not just support). A long time ago you would pay about $500 to buy SketchUp, then $95 to update to the new release. Dan was almost word perfect, the only part to explain further is about how you get the new version. ![]() Some slight changes to what Dan and Mike said… ![]()
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