Provided you purchase the official and original digital download from Laminar Research ie not the 3rd party Steam hybrid, you will have your copy of virtually immediately (depending on download speed). because I have no interest in these aircraft I have not installed them So, the bottom line option is to purchase a digital download. Depending on the supplier of the DVD disc set the only advantage you will get are a few extra discs with additional aircraft. To have one installed would be an option predominantly for a purpose built machine. If you purchase a new PC these days they are generally supplied without a DVD drive. The design and configuration of computers are changing very quickly. ![]() I have raised the issue with Laminar and their advice is this is not on their "to do" list. Unfortunately XP11 does not have a USB dongle that substitutes for disc 1. The disc version of XP11 also requires disc 1 to be installed in a disc drive. My system is currently mothballed as well. Like you I started with XP10 and now ventured to XP11. ![]() You're right that they won't give you a Steam key if you buy directly from Laminar Research, but you really don't need one since the standalone version is hardly the inconvenience you make it out to be.I am not with Laminar Research just a flight simmer from downunder. You can also buy a USB dongle if neither of those options appeal to you, but that is an additional expense and is more intended for people and businesses with multiple computers since you only have to buy one copy of X-Plane and can then buy a dongle for each computer you plan to use it on, which, in the end, is cheaper than buying multiple copies of X-Plane. In fact, the program will remember the key for you, and on future occasions when you're prompted for the key (for instance, when the software wants to check in with the mothership), the fields will be already filled in. Keeping the program DVD in the drive is not that big of a deal, and neither is keeping the software key easily accessible if you buy the download-only version. Keeping the software up to date is super, duper easy as well since X-Plane will automatically inform you when a new version is available, and all you have to do is click "OK", and the installer takes care of the rest. You can even have multiple copies installed on the same computer, which some people do for testing and to try out beta versions without trashing their primary installation. It installs in its own directory that can be moved, copied, and backed up to your heart's content because the program is not linked in any way to your operating system with messy registry entries or external libraries. All-in-all, I see just too many negatives for not having the Steam version.The biggest benefit of the standalone version is that it really is standalone. I've also read that Laminar won't give a Steam key if you bought it in another way. Publicado originalmente por War Radish:The convenience of always having it to hand to (re)install, the automatic updates (apparently the update system of 10, outside of Steam, was poor with reports that people sometimes had to wipe and re-install the game from scratch after an unsuccessful update), the hasle of having to insert DVD No.1 as copy protection if you got a version on disc, or not having to remember or find the installation key code if you bought the download version. Just a heads-up for anyone who is too impatient and wants in to the beta version now: rather than buying directly from Laminar, if you get it from Aerosoft it's a little cheaper and you also get 3 free airport addons (buy Xplane 10 with the automatic upgrade to Xplane 11 and the price is lower still). All-in-all, I see just too many negatives for not having the Steam version. ![]() The convenience of always having it to hand to (re)install, the automatic updates (apparently the update system of 10, outside of Steam, was poor with reports that people sometimes had to wipe and re-install the game from scratch after an unsuccessful update), the hasle of having to insert DVD No.1 as copy protection if you got a version on disc, or not having to remember or find the installation key code if you bought the download version. After reading around a lot today, it seems the consensus from people that bought the last one (Xplane 10) is that it's better to wait for a Steam version to release. I've been thinking of picking this sim up.
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