- Wed Apr 11, 2007 7:42 pm
#220511
hi there
this might not be a problem to all of you, but for me, it is often the case.
at university, there are lot's of people around me, so it is very well
possible that someone steals my license. I know, maybe it's paranoid,
and I mostly activate my password protected screensaver, but still. Maxwell
is expensive (even though students get a very good price, thank you
for that!) and I don't want some looser run around with my license.
I could imagine that for alot of people, like for freelancers that work
in several offices, it could be of use if maxwell would ask for a password
at startup. But hey, maybe these are really only my worries
I already thought about writing a tool myself, a simple program that
writes your license into a .dat file after prompting for a password, and
removes the file when maxwell is not neede.
What are your thoughts about this matter?
I honestly don't like how nextlimit handles the whole
license thingy, while it is very simple, it's at the same
time also very attrative for thieves.
greets
yves
this might not be a problem to all of you, but for me, it is often the case.
at university, there are lot's of people around me, so it is very well
possible that someone steals my license. I know, maybe it's paranoid,
and I mostly activate my password protected screensaver, but still. Maxwell
is expensive (even though students get a very good price, thank you
for that!) and I don't want some looser run around with my license.
I could imagine that for alot of people, like for freelancers that work
in several offices, it could be of use if maxwell would ask for a password
at startup. But hey, maybe these are really only my worries
I already thought about writing a tool myself, a simple program that
writes your license into a .dat file after prompting for a password, and
removes the file when maxwell is not neede.
What are your thoughts about this matter?
I honestly don't like how nextlimit handles the whole
license thingy, while it is very simple, it's at the same
time also very attrative for thieves.
greets
yves





- By Jochen Haug