Wuerstchenhund, I know that Jeff addressed this but I wanted to chime in too on the pricing subject since price ranges were mentioned for the Pro versions of the apps.
The Pro upgrades for the DMM and Power supply apps are $200 and $150. Other Pro upgrade licenses range up to $500, with an exception for the Function Generator Pro license which is up there at $750. I'm not saying that these prices are better than the free value that the base apps provide, but not all are up in the $700 range.
Thanks for the reply, David! I have to admit that I didn't check the DMM and PSU options as they weren't really relevant for us, and I agree that the pricing of up to $200 sounds much more reasonable for what these modules seem to offer (although it's still not cheap by any means).
However, the main gripes are the prices for the Function Generator Pro app (as you said $750), the Spectrum Analyzer Pro app ($500), the Oscilloscope Pro app ($400) and the Power Meter Pro app ($500), which most of the customer I talked to found excessive (and I have to agree). Don't get me wrong, the apps are nicely done, but when I pay in excess of $3500 for a 30MHz AWG it's hard to justify spending another $750 just to be able to edit some waveforms (and btw, Tektronix offers their Waveform Editor ArbExpress for free!).
Same with the oscilloscope Pro app, which essentially offers roughly the same as for example LeCroy's WaveStudio, which is completely free and unlimited.
As to the Spectrum Analyzer Pro app, again it's nicely done but doesn't really offer any notable advanced functionality that could justify the $500 price tag.
I'd say that a price at the $300 to $350 for the Function Generator Pro app would be much more reasonable (and even then it would still be expensive, and it would still be the by far most expensive waveform editor application on the market!). The scope Pro app shouldn't really cost more than $200 to $250, same for Spectrum Analyzer Pro and Power Meter Pro.
Please don't take this the wrong way, I do like BenchVue, but from a professional point of view I simply can't see good value for money at these price points. And I guess for hobbyists (who are often notoriously cash-strapped) it's not much different.