Floppertje said:
A) Every application I've gotten for free due to education has been downloaded. The user experience for a downloaded program is exactly the same for a box version in any case. Can you say the same when comparing physical books and e-books?
B) My point is that software companies can provide free academic versions because it costs them nothing other than lost sales (which is offset by the fact that providing free software to academia provides the professional world with people trained to use their software). Textbook publishers have zero incentive to provide free books because they would be eliminating their sole market.
C) You must be either young, or are far more privileged for your own good. I have to work because if I don't, my family doesn't eat. Family time is not flexible because I have very limited time to spend with my family because they have to go to bed at a set time. I pursue education, often at the expense of sleep, in order to make a better life for my family where we don't just barely scrape by.