My guess is that there are some exceptions to this. People who routinely try out software are good at reading online help and figuring out software even more complex (gasp!) than FrameMaker. This is not an endorsement of piracy, but were I Adobe, I might encourage this behavior, because people who become addicted to software, as soon as they're in a business environment which will pay for it, speak up loudly and clearly to request it. That is why Apple was so successful giving computers away at low or no cost to schools, and Microsoft was so successful with their student copies of Microsoft Office (on the path to world domination).
--- Bodvar Bjorgvinsson <bodvar at gmail.com> wrote: > I guess not many are using illegal copies of FM. FM > is simply not a > kind of software that you can use powerfully on your > own without a lot > of learning and support. Which makes it awkward, to > say the least, to > use an illegal copy. User Interface design blog http://user-advocacy.blogspot.com/ Code::Design::UI::Consulting http://www.dionysius.com/ ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a PS3 game guru. Get your game face on with the latest PS3 news and previews at Yahoo! Games. http://videogames.yahoo.com/platform?platform=120121