I don't remember coming across crossgrading either. But as I understand it, crossgrading is when you purchase software that 'crossgrades' you to a similar/equivlent version. Say you might have paid for the standard version of some software. Paying a discounted crossgrade fee you'll have access to the professional version's features.Originally posted by J0n
In the Fowler book, it says "An upgrade to the new version is offered to existing users and often a crossgrade is offered to registered users of competing products." - what exactaly is a crossgrade?
Hmmmm i thought it was more like a redemption upgrade, whereby you purchase say Win2k, and then XP was released a few mths later and you can claim XP at a special offer.Originally posted by sunny
I don't remember coming across crossgrading either. But as I understand it, crossgrading is when you purchase software that 'crossgrades' you to a similar/equivlent version. Say you might have paid for the standard version of some software. Paying a discounted crossgrade fee you'll have access to the professional version's features.
So I would imagine in this case, if say you are used to using photoshop 6. I might be offering you a crossgrade of my own photo editing software for a cheap price to get you interested in my software.