You have 15 days to test Transmit with no features disabled. After 15 days, Transmit will limit your sessions to 10 minutes at a time. Additionally, your Favorites will no longer be accessible, although they'll still be saved for when you decide to purchase.<hr></blockquote>
<strong>Yup. I'm gonna finally register. No more free ride like Transmit 1. But it's such a cool app, I don't mind.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Good for you, Jasoco. Don't forget that Transmit 2 is rewritten in Cocoa from the ground up. Their support is tremendous.
And (soapbox) it's always a good idea to pay for shareware. It encourages other developers to innovate and current ones to keep their products competitive. Most is $30 or less, two pizzas, a 2-liter Coke and several DVD movie rentals. Does anybody think twice about doing that?
<strong>And (soapbox) it's always a good idea to pay for shareware. It encourages other developers to innovate and current ones to keep their products competitive. Most is $30 or less, two pizzas, a 2-liter Coke and several DVD movie rentals. Does anybody think twice about doing that?</strong><hr></blockquote>
You used to be able to get an iMac for the price of 3 pizzas a month. Jeff Goldblum told me .
Comments
[quote]Shareware Limitations
You have 15 days to test Transmit with no features disabled. After 15 days, Transmit will limit your sessions to 10 minutes at a time. Additionally, your Favorites will no longer be accessible, although they'll still be saved for when you decide to purchase.<hr></blockquote>
<strong>Yup. I'm gonna finally register. No more free ride like Transmit 1. But it's such a cool app, I don't mind.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Good for you, Jasoco. Don't forget that Transmit 2 is rewritten in Cocoa from the ground up. Their support is tremendous.
And (soapbox) it's always a good idea to pay for shareware. It encourages other developers to innovate and current ones to keep their products competitive. Most is $30 or less, two pizzas, a 2-liter Coke and several DVD movie rentals. Does anybody think twice about doing that?
Petrie
[ 10-30-2002: Message edited by: phranky ]</p>
<strong>And (soapbox) it's always a good idea to pay for shareware. It encourages other developers to innovate and current ones to keep their products competitive. Most is $30 or less, two pizzas, a 2-liter Coke and several DVD movie rentals. Does anybody think twice about doing that?</strong><hr></blockquote>
You used to be able to get an iMac for the price of 3 pizzas a month. Jeff Goldblum told me