On 10 Aug 2003 at 17:39, J. Simon van der Walt wrote:
> I was interested in the angle that
> mac people are more used to it than PCers; I'm a mac-er. I also wonder
> about trans-atlantic differences? There seems to be a libertarian
> strand to the argument which feels strange, perhaps us Euro's ar
Q. Does Finale 2004 have copy protection?
A. No. It does, however, require software registration
within 30 days of installation. Failure to do so will
temporarily disable printing and saving until you do
register. You may also install Finale on two machines
(on the same platform ñ an additional pla
But it also removes the saving/printing capability from the current
machine when it gives you that code, so it is possible for the number to
appear on your screen thus disabling the installed version and for the
power to go out at that point in time before you have a chance to write
the code do
> From: "David H. Bailey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> But it also removes the saving/printing capability
No, you can print from an unregistered copy, I think.
> from the current
> machine when it gives you that code, so it is possible for the number to
> appear on your screen thus disabling the ins
But your reply doesn't come back immediately, which is what I meant.
Yes, you can contact them 24/7, but people aren't monitoring it and
replying 24/7. When I first bought Sibelius I had to wait a day to get
my registration. Luckily that was within the 5-day use-before-disabling
period. If I
Finale 2004 Registration FAQs
Q. Does Finale 2004 have copy protection?
A. No. It does, however, require software registration
within 30 days of installation. Failure to do so will
temporarily disable printing and saving until you do
register. You may also install Finale on two machines
(on the
: "J. Simon van der Walt"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"David H. Bailey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: "William Roberts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Copies to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Send reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTE
On Saturday, August 09, 2003 3:57 AM, David H. Bailey
> If I install Finale2004 on my machine and it does its electronic
> handshake and receives its registration activation code, then
> it works
> forever on that machine, right? When I sell that machine,
> the software
> will still be on th
This brings up yet another legal issue that I'm not sure MakeMusic have
thought about -- if the software is registered to a specific machine,
does it remain with that machine? Talk about giving away free copies!
If I install Finale2004 on my machine and it does its electronic
handshake and rec
On Friday, August 8, 2003, at 06:21 PM, Tyler Turner wrote:
Q. What happens if MakeMusic! ceases to exist? Will I
still be able to use the software?
A. If we cease
to exist, Finale will continue to run on your
computer. You would, however, run into problems if you
tried, for example, to register
At 11:04 PM 8/9/03 +1000, RockyRoad wrote:
PS: The system is acceptable to me. I am a
veteran of dongles (Logic), keydisks (Soundiver)
and other arcane systems. Of course the potential
demise of MakeMusic is a concern but the greater
issue their would be whether the last Finale
would continue to ru
Darcy James Argue wrote:
[snip]
reasonable way to transfer my old Finale files to a non-obsolete music
notation app?" and, "Good lord, I'm not really going to have to start
using Sibelius now, am I?"
And THAT could be the scariest what-if of all!
--
David H. Bailey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
At 11:04 PM 8/9/03 +1000, RockyRoad wrote:
>PS: The system is acceptable to me. I am a
>veteran of dongles (Logic), keydisks (Soundiver)
>and other arcane systems. Of course the potential
>demise of MakeMusic is a concern but the greater
>issue their would be whether the last Finale
>would con
David H. Bailey wrote:
> But your reply doesn't come back immediately,
> which is what I meant.
Really? I've re-registered my copy of Sibelius on the internet by filling in their
form, and I got my registration number emailed to me right then and there, within
seconds. I was up and running
It's the "one working day" bit that is the problem -- they don't work on
the weekend or late at night. At least they didn't when I registered my
copy of Sibelius. So if you have a problem on Friday evening, it might
not be until Monday that you can get working again. Which is rotten if
you a
> Sibelius apparently manages the transfer of licenses
from one machine to another via floppies, which
strikes me as not such a great idea. (What do Mac users do?)
I would say that finally, after 20 years of IBM PC compatible
floppies, we have a successor to the floppy which fits into
ALL perso
David H. Bailey wrote:
>Then you have to contact Sibelius (which does NOT have 24/7 live or
>electronic installation assistance) and meekly ask for permission to
>start using your legally purchased software again.
I can't believe that I sound like a Sibelius apologist, but in the interest of
e
Brad Beyenhof wrote:
[snip]
Sound appealing? I still can't understand why an upgrade to Fin2k4,
which fixes SO MANY of the problems I've spent so much time attempting
to overcome, could be declined by any serious professional. Copy
protection or no copy protection. I think, in the case of any
At 11:04 PM 8/9/2003 +1000, RockyRoad wrote:
PS: The system is acceptable to me. I am a veteran of dongles (Logic),
keydisks (Soundiver) and other arcane systems. Of course the potential
demise of MakeMusic is a concern but the greater issue their would be
whether the last Finale would continue
Oh, great, now I'm gonna have to go buy an $80 "dongle" just so I can
guarantee that my legally purchased and never pirated copy of Finale can
work, should I move to a new computer after Apple has purchased MakeMusic?
And here I thought the cost of the upgrade was supposed to be $89!
Tobias G
Thanks, Tyler.
BF
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Tyler Turner
> Sent: Friday, August 08, 2003 6:22 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Finale] RE: 2004 Panic
>
>
>
> Finale 2004 Registration FAQs
> Sibelius apparently manages the transfer of licenses
> from one machine to another via floppies, which
> strikes me as not such a great idea. (What do Mac users do?)
I would say that finally, after 20 years of IBM PC compatible
floppies, we have a successor to the floppy which fits into
ALL
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