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- Newsgroups: comp.archives.msdos.d
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!bunyip.cc.uq.oz.au!qdpii!ianst
- From: ianst@qdpii.comp.qdpi.oz.au (Ian Staples)
- Subject: Re: A better way to entice registrations
- Message-ID: <1993Jan12.102843.28794@qdpii.comp.qdpi.oz.au>
- Keywords: Shareware registration Cyrillic editor Russian UK Thomson Cyril
- Organization: Qld Dept Primary Industries
- References: <1993Jan10.152944.12391@ncsu.edu> <syny.726700502@crux1.cit.cornell.edu> <sheldon.726806659@pv1413.vincent.iastate.edu>
- Date: Tue, 12 Jan 1993 10:28:43 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <sheldon.726806659@pv1413.vincent.iastate.edu> sheldon@iastate.edu (Steve Sheldon) writes:
- >In <syny.726700502@crux1.cit.cornell.edu> syny@crux3.cit.cornell.edu (R Craig Stevenson) writes:
- >
- >>> What is the difference between disabling a feature and offering an
- >>> additional feature upon registration, just a few words?
- >
- >>Let's put semantics aside. There are (at least) 3 methods commonly
- [Stuff gone]
- >
- >>1) disable a central feature. For example, you can try our editor,
- >>but you can't save and files; you can try our database, but your
- >>limited to 50 records per database. The goal is to allow you to try
- >>the software out, but to render it useless for any *real* work.
-
-
- FoxBase+ used a technique similar to the above, which I think many other
- commercial products could emulate (will Microsoft do it with FoxPro? :).
-
- They didn't disable a feature, they just limited it to begin. The buyer
- was given two "activation codes", one implemented a restricted version of
- the program the other implemented the full bottle. The whole point was
- that you could *try* the program with a subset of your actual data and
- application. If you didn't like what it did, you could return
- it to Fox and get a refund, provided that you hadn't used the full
- activation code.
-
- I can't see any problem with shareware authors adopting similar tactics.
- *Provided* that the "crippling" doesn't give a false impression
- of what the program can really do - as it might if a database worked
- nicely with only 2000 records, for example; but slowed to a crawl in
- a real world application requiring swapping to disk to handle large
- sets of data.
-
-
-
- --
- Ian Staples | Internet : ianst@qdpii.comp.qdpi.oz.au
- c/- P.O. Box 1054, | Fax : +61 (0)70 923 593
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