No. I don't understand why it's acceptable for a product to be sold with enough bugs. Paying for a bug-fix release (one that would riddled with at least some other issues) is not the answer. Imagine if you bought a widescreen tv, only to find that certain features worked only some of the time and some not at all, to compound this, your cable service also presented programming issues and challenges. Or your car. Features as prominent as a gauge. Or even a major program like Mathematica, which is at least equally sophisticated in context to Finale. Or an Adobe product. Think about what it would mean to the market and to advances and innovations. We are stuck with a great application that is unfortunately far from perfect and for some reason the company does not have high enough standards to perfect their product the way the other products I've mentioned perfect them. Comments?
Dean -- Dean Rosenthal www.deanrosenthal.org > On Oct 13, 2014, at 12:09 PM, Girard Bowe <girard.b...@verizon.net> wrote: > > I would love to have a bug-fix release, and would pay for it. _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list Finale@shsu.edu https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale To unsubscribe from finale send a message to: finale-unsubscr...@shsu.edu