That is interesting and I'm sure people at Finale are purring with delight and contentment.
Also, Avid is perhaps an instructive example in business. They were once the only way to do serious digital video editing. I remember hearing about their systems that had ALMOST A TERRABYTE! in video storage capability. ALso, the ability to have MULTIPLE TIMELINES! Etc. Etc. In other words, now every rinky-dink amateur NLE with a $70 external hard drive can do most of what only the early Avid systems did. And a low cost professional system like Vegas does EVERYTHING avid does, at less than a tenth of the price, with no crashes or problems - on an ordinary PC. In other words, technology has rendered Avid utterly obsolete. They are now literally floundering as a business, turning this way and that, after first reacting by going into consumer marketing, now going back to industrial only.
At least this is what seems to have happened. Everything Avid ever created was out of the question for me, since I am an ultra low budget user. So I always gravitated to DIY solutions of tinkering things together, and this approach has steadily gotten better with improvements in each compnent, while huge, grossly overpriced complete systems like Avid have become less and less needed.
It reminds me of the Synclavier. Does anyone remember that? It was a sampler that used a MAINFRAME computer, cost six figures, and was fewer samples than one of the Vienna starter editions. But it was a COMPLETE system! This kind of completeness is actually something to be avoid like the plague in technology. Advanced, huge, lumbering, unable to adapt when the giant asteroid strikes, unlike the wretched little mammalian vermin previously underfoot...