chinese programmers have no loyalty. they work somewhere to learn then go across the street for 1$ an hour more
I would move too. That's a doubling of the guy's wages!
Nick Martin (founding Protel/Altium CEO) did three smart things in his life and the Altium Board of Directors did one smart thing in their life;
1/ Martin floated the company on the Australian Stock Exchange;
2/ Martin held on to many of his Altium shares until 2 years after he was pushed from the Board.
3/ The Altium board pushed Martin off the board in October 2012 (Martin was so unhappy at being pushed he demanded "the Altium board to convene a general meeting and gave notice that he intends to file shareholder resolutions to remove most of the sitting directors" -
http://pcdandf.com/cms/designnews/9463-ousted-martin-to-altium-board-not-so-fast)
http://pcdandf.com/cms/designnews/9443-end-of-an-era-martin-out-at-altium"According to PCD&F sources, certain Altium directors had privately been unhappy with Martin for some time over the financial performance of the company. Martin, however, was as tied to Altium as Steve Jobs was to Apple, having founded the company (then known as Protel) in 1985".
4/ When Martin was pushed, Altium shares were worth just AUD$0.25ea;
5/ Whilst absent from the company, shares rose to AUD$2.50ea which encouraged Martin to sell his shareholding in October 2013 for AUD$30.85 million.
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/altium/altium-designer-new-pricing-model-and-high-end-low-end-tool-in-development/msg406199/#msg406199By removing Martin from the decision making processes, Martin has been able to retire a very wealthy man. Martin may hate the new Directors at Altium, but his wallet sure loves them to bits.