In a message dated 4/26/2007 3:25:50 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


> Sad to hear that it uses the new virtual dongling that has become the
> norm.

Much rather have a hard dongle... I'm staying with 2004 .. does what I need 
and I use Solidworks for the 3D - they seem to have the parametric stuff a bit 
better than Autodesk had in the past.

Here's a rant I sent to one of the "soft lock" companies; I have to deal with 
this with my recording studio too:


Thing is, I really want a dongle version - here's why:

I hate soft locks 'cause if you go out of business, your registration website 
is down, or I upgrade hardware on a weekend, I'm screwed.

Say four years from now I'm called to rework a previous design I did using 
your tool.

Now, I haven't used that tool since we now (four years later) have 
di-lithium, whiz-bang powered DSP/FPGA/ costs 0.10 USD MCU's. So I've since 
upgraded 
hardware, and moved on....

Well, Donald Trump wants millions of these old designs built but needs a 
hard-coded pre-nuptial that prints on the LCD. So I try to reload the old 
program.

It's Sunday on Christmas holiday. And there's a major riot of trophy 
wives-to-be that knocked out all the Internet connectivity 'cause they're 
pissed that 
Donald is selling these things.

I find the old installer, run it and ----

--- lo-and-behold it's useless.

Then lets say you guys go bye bye 'cause you hit the jackpot, they don't make 
the stuff anymore 'cause the aforementioned di-lithium W-B chips are now in 
vogue, and you now backpack across Europe eating just whole wheat toast and 
coffee. You married a Sports Illustrated model and don't want bothered.

So now I got files written for your specific tool and all my work is now lost 
forever... Donald's mad....my house gets over run with angry trophy wives... 
Tom Cruise is jumping up and down on my couch like a crazed orangutan.... not 
a pretty scene. And it's Christmas...

So I like USB dongles ...


In fact, having no way to re-enable the software without intervention from a 
manufacturer that goes belly up is a violation of the Fair Use/Quiet 
Enjoyment:

“Quiet Enjoyment”
Licensees, having paid for the right to use licensed technology, generally 
seek to ensure that nothing interferes with the benefits they have received. 
For 
example, licensees are concerned with their ability to obtain assistance from 
the licensor in fixing defects that are discovered in the technology, to have 
the right to fix the defects themselves if the licensor is unable to do so, 
to obtain periodic upgrades and other maintenance services from the licensor, 
to transfer their rights if they sell their business and to continue enjoying 
the technology even if the licensor becomes bankrupt."


Most people inaccurately associate ownership to the technology as  "... 
that's the reason they license software..." but that ain't so...

You see, one of the first "licenced" forms of technology was by none other 
than Ray Dolby. The reason they license it is to forgo "selling" ( and the 
inherent issues of capitalization/export/tax issues) so that all sales are 
considered licensed works which are considered as royalty income - therefore 
taxed as 
income.

See this:

http://www.fenwick.com/docstore/Publications/IP/Patent_Licensing.pdf


So a dongle version would be nice....



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