Want to use the digitiser feature, though? That's another £258.
Access to the full memory of the device? A further £161. (Seriously... memory chips are NOT expensive these days!)
The point is, it is not the memory chips, they are already there probably. You are paying for the development, or something like that...
The digitiser and memory option are just software keys (like the NISPOM option), the hardware is exactly the same.
I don't mind paying for features that take time and effort to develop. I spent about £600 on serial decoding for my Agilent scope, and it was well worth it.
Enabling the use of memory that's already there is just removing an arbitrary limit, though. There's no design effort, no innovation.
They've done something similar with their BenchVue software. The basic version is free, which is great, but if you want to data log for more than 1 hour, you have to buy the 'pro' version for another £128 (and even more, if you want to log data from other types of instrument).
I agree - we shouldn't have arbitrary memory limits in modern devices.
I am a little annoyed with the CSV output on the 34461A, despite having an RTC, it just provides a list of readings. From looking at the manual, the equivalent in the 65/70A can have meta data at the top, saying when the data started and the gap between measurements. But that haven't done it so you can grab the CSV off the meter and graph it straight away (with the time on the x-axis), which seems to be a bit of an oversight.
I tried the first version of bench vue and I didn't think very much of it - it just didn't seem to work very well. And I think that is the feedback they got about, as they have overhauled a lot of it, with the new pro version being there for them to recoup their losses. For multimeters, the pro version is needed for limit testing, the histogram display and greater than 1 hour recording. Whilst I can understand limit testing being in a pro version, the whole advantage of the software is easy data capture over reasonable periods of time, so to limit it to less than an hour seems stupid. For the £128 I would much prefer to whip something up in python (especially considering I already have the USB TMC interface implemented).
They also do an iphone / android app, which I thought was a bit of a strange idea - I can't see many people using it except at trade shows. I tried the original version (when it was ios only) and it was awful, it crashed so often and displayed results incorrectly. But the old version communicated directly with the multimeter over a network (wifi-router-ethernet). The new version (with both ios and android support) requires a computer to be connected to the multimeter, with the app talking to the computer, which, to me at least, seems to negate any advantage of the app.