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1992-01-25
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THE SHAREWARE USERS GUIDE
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SUMMARY OF TOPICS IN ORDER OF PRESENTATION
Types of software: shareware, public domain, freeware, commercial
Eight easy steps to using shareware FAST!
Minimum DOS commands for using shareware
Copying the master disk
The directory listing of a shareware disk
File names and extensions - the keys to the kingdom
A turbocharged shortcut
Unpacking and installing, including ARCS, ZIPS, LZH and more
Configuring the program if necessary
Running the program
Feedback: either register or send your regrets!
Common questions and answers
Recommended reading list for shareware users and authors
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SHAREWARE, PUBLIC DOMAIN, FREEWARE AND COMMERCIAL SOFTWARE
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SHAREWARE is software which has been prepared by a variety of
individuals and companies. The concept governing shareware is
that you "try before you buy." Shareware is above all a unique
marketing experiment which operates on the "honor system."
In practice, shareware is frequently of the same quality as
commercial software. However, it uses a different, and somewhat
less expensive method of marketing which involves letting
others freely copy, use and distribute the shareware. What you
receive from your friend at work, computer club, commercial
shareware disk distributor or BBS modem system is a "disk
evaluation copy" which you may use, copy and above all TRY.
Documentation and instructions for program use are usually
contained within special text files on the same disk as the
program and sometimes take a little detective work to locate.
Formal printed documentation and instruction books may also
be available from the author.
If you like what you find and use the program consistently -
many shareware authors suggest 30 days, but this is not a
firm rule - then you are expected to register the shareware
by submitting a fee usually by mail to the author which
frequently brings additional benefits sent back to you by
the author of the shareware. Above all, it is legal to copy,
distribute and USE shareware.
Computers improve the world, shareware improves computers
and registration is what improves and motivates shareware
programmers who are called "authors" in the trade.
If you do not submit a registration fee AT LEAST send a
postcard with your thoughts on why improvement is needed.
You just might NEED and USE the revised version which is
produced due to your funding or critique. Either way, feedback
is essential to the shareware process!
The registration fee requested by the author is a matter of good
conscience since shareware registration fees are paid by
users directly to the author "on the honor system." Paying
an honest registration fee frequently means you will receive
additional disks for the program or further instruction
documents, bonus items or other "inducements" directly from the
author.
Registration is more than this though: on a human scale your
registration fee is supporting a small company or individual
who shows you how to use and understand a computer. A programmer
is a craftsman whose tools are logic and considerable creativity.
Your registration check is a special bond which allows this
quiet "honor system" of submitting your registration fee
for a programming job well done to motivate creative programmers
to produce some rather astonishing products!
The best way to summarize is this: you are not registering a
product, you are helping a person or small company do something
which improves how man uses the computer, most important tool of
this century. Paying a registration fee to the author of the
program rewards technical craftsmanship for providing creative
computer solutions at unbelievably low cost. Good programmers are
rare creatures - a small registration check goes a long way and
means a lot to a small shareware author!
PUBLIC DOMAIN software is a second type of computer software
which is NOT copyrighted and has no other legal restrictions
as to use by the general public. The author may or may not
be identified. Most public domain programs result from the
efforts of a programmer who designs a small piece of software
for personal use. The author may not decide to invest
additional time in developing and marketing the software due to
lack of market knowledge or lack time and funds to effectively
develop it into a larger commercial or shareware package.
For these and other reasons, the author does not copyright the
software and allows it to be copied, used or even incorporated
into other software packages since it is part of the public
domain available for the common good.
FREEWARE is related to BUT NOT the same as public domain
software. Freeware requires no registration fee or reimbursement
for use by the public but the copyright is RETAINED BY THE
AUTHOR who notes a copyright restriction within the body or
documentation of the software. A reason for this subtle
difference is that the author may, at a future date, wish to
reclaim all or part of the software or modify and reissue
the software as shareware or commercial software. The copyright
continues the unique claim of the author to the product.
COMMERCIAL SOFTWARE is computer software provided by a company
or individual which is generally marketed via retail, wholesale
or other commercial means but does not use or promote a
registration fee concept, a "try before you buy" concept, and
does not use or promote sharing copies of the program among
individuals or other enterprises. The user is expected to purchase
the right to use the package BEFORE being allowed to use the
software extensively.
Note that either purchase or registration of any software
package does not mean you own the package, merely THE RIGHT AND
LICENSE TO USE IT. The author or company which produced it owns
the software programming code and is granting you a LICENSE to use
it in exchange for a fee or other compensation. In essence you
do not buy or own software, you merely license its use. The
author owns it.
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EIGHT EASY STEPS TO USING SHAREWARE
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Print this section and keep it next to your computer! These
steps are the secrets to using shareware! We will look at each
suggestion in greater detail in just a moment . . .
1) Make a copy of the shareware disk, store your original
and work with the copy.
2) Do a DIRECTORY LISTING of the disk(s) on paper or your
monitor screen.
3) Determine FILE TYPES using extensions and filename clues.
4) Read DOCUMENTATION and TEXT FILES if available on disk.
5) Unpack and install the program.
6) Configure the program if necessary.