Richard Gaskin wrote:
J. Landman Gay wrote:
Ben Rubinstein wrote:

Is the reverse also true, ie can Enterprise users edit stacks created by Media (and then have them read by Media again)?

Yes.


I'm confused: I thought the idea with the file format change was to prevent Media people from handing their stacks to owners of Studio and Enterprise to make standalones from them.

Not exactly. They could do that. If they find they need to do it too often, they'll probably just upgrade to Studio. Lots of people have done that, because asking someone else to repeatedly do builds for you is a pain in the tochus.


Enterprise and Studio use the same format, so if those products can both read and write Media stacks what's the point?

The point is to disallow faking a standalone with a Media stack. Stacks saved in Media will not open in a standalone, with the exception of Runtime's Player which has special compensations for Media stacks. All licensed editions can read stacks saved by any other edition, provided the edition can read 2.7 file format (which is the only format Media can save in.) However, once a Media user saves a stack, they can't fake a standalone by using something like StackRunner, for example.

--
Jacqueline Landman Gay         |     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
HyperActive Software           |     http://www.hyperactivesw.com
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