On Friday, 27 September 2013 at 11:05:17 UTC, Dmitry Leskov wrote:
On Tuesday, 24 September 2013 at 09:17:47 UTC, Chris wrote:
On Friday, 20 September 2013 at 05:23:15 UTC, Dmitry Leskov
wrote:
On Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 09:44:30 UTC, Chris wrote:
Yes, the whole issue of decompilation was also an issue.
Funnily enough, a few years ago I wrote an email to
Excelsior asking if you guys offer a discount for academia.
Our project would have qualified as "non-commercial use".
But I never got an answer. So I started looking for
alternatives, and here I am now :-)
We respond to all requests that look legit. Sending from a
university email address certainly helps, not least because
our responses to free email users, especially Gmail, often
end up in the Junk Mail folder, probably because they talk
about "free", "download", and such...
--
Dmitry
I sent the email from my university email address and the spam
filter is clever enough to know that it shouldn't filter
answers from email addresses I have sent an email to, even if
the words "free" etc appear. If in doubt, at least it asks me.
Anyway, I switched to D and don't regret it. Also how do you
define "legit"? If I send an email with a simple question "do
you offer a discount for university projects?" or the like,
why am I not entitled to an answer? Why is it not "legit"?
Because I didn't include an elaborate description of the
project? Why should I, if I don't even know that you offer a
discount? Would be a waste of time, if the answer is a plain
"No!". This said, I don't rule it out that you answered the
email and that it got lost on the way. This happens sometimes.
If you asked a question like that, we most definitely
responded. If you still have that email you sent us back in the
day, would you please forward it to me?
My email address is on the Contact page of our Web site.
Fair enough, I've forwarded the email. But the code has been
rewritten in D and works on all platforms natively (including
Windows, if you want to call that a platform).