Daniel Wolf wrote:
Noel Stoutenburg wrote:
to which I would suggest a better option would be for the group of power users to buy shares, and make a point of this at the shareholder's meeting.
ns _____
A point made at a shareholder's meeting by minority shareholders is usually ignored. Been there, done that: the response from the majority shareholders is usually, you don't like the corporate policy, then sell your shares, we think the present policy will earn more money and selling your handful of shares will have no impact on share price. A point made by commercial clients to the shareholders concerning a faulty product is much more likely to have an effect on corporate policy as it implies a direct result on the corporate sales results.
I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the corporate clients, such as Warner Brothers and Hal Leonard don't have to go through the authentication process at all. I bet that corporate versions don't have that process in the code, since the onus for policing licensed installations would fall on the corporation, subject to surprise audits by the publishers.
-- David H. Bailey [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [email protected] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
