Trimble no longer sells SketchUp 2017 licenses. They stopped activating them years ago. If you call their sales line today, they will try to sell you a subscription for $300+ a year.
If you just need to open a 2017 file, you don't need a license. SketchUp 2017 Make (the free version) is still available on archives like the Wayback Machine. It can't do commercial work or Pro exports, but it opens the files perfectly. The Verdict: Is it worth the hunt? Honestly? If you are a professional billing $100/hour, the time you spend hunting for a 2017 license is worth more than the $349/year for the new subscription. license sketchup 2017
You might be a professional architect trying to open a legacy client file. You might be a woodworker who refuses to let a monthly subscription bleed your bank account dry. Or, like me, you might just believe that 2017 was the peak of 3D modeling software. Trimble no longer sells SketchUp 2017 licenses
Besides the obvious legal risks (Trimble has a surprisingly aggressive legal team), downloading a cracked .exe from a sketchy Russian forum is a great way to turn your workstation into a Bitcoin mining botnet. So, how do you actually get that magical license key without selling a kidney? If you just need to open a 2017
October 2024 Reading Time: 4 minutes
But if you are a student, a hobbyist, or a stubborn purist who hates SaaS (Software as a Service) with a burning passion? Hunt that license down.