Autocad 2010 Free Download Full Version With Crackers

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Garcia Miller

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Jul 12, 2024, 3:38:08 PM7/12/24
to melmarknewi

Im looking for a way to protect some lisp , i know the vlx method, but if theres someone here who can do it a little bit more like and installation with a password ,that would be great . its for commercial use . ( i know basically that anyone can hack lisp if he really want but im not bothered)

After a while im trying to figure out the subject , lets say I encrypt through inno setup so the installer is working per user, but how all this protect the vlx file? It still seats in a folder with the rest of the file and one can just copy the vlx to another..

Autocad 2010 Free Download Full Version With Crackers


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Beyond that, you will have to put some sort of password protection within your .vlx and that is a separate exercise. You might be able to do that during installation with some custom code that runs within Inno based on detail obtained on purchase, but if .vlx is readily crackable it won't stop the bad guys. Even so, the .vlx can access registry data to verify it's running on the approved machine. Again, a cracker may easily expose this and bypass the check.

Ultimately the effort put in to protect your product becomes better spent in constantly improving it and changing protection around inside it between each release to disable any published cracks, simply because the vast majority of your real market are not interested in cracked versions, preferring access to your support to a risk of malware. Of the others, most won't buy anyway.

Like SWL210 search here there was some lengthy dscussions about protecting code, using FAS some simple methods check serial number, check PC hard disk ID, bury a code in the registery, on install it overwrites the code so only one go at install. Network IP address every pc is unique, some of these methods require User input just like Autocad's install, it will mean maybe an Email or phone call.

Almost forgot our product had mutiple lisp's so we just simply used old fashoined DOS via a batch file to add the protection routine to the existing code, then make a customer version, then use Autocad to make FAS files again this can be scripted.

My opinion is that, unless you have a real hold on the market, it's better not to make it machine specific. The problem with making it machine specific is that companies upgrade to new machines and don't want the added hassle. We have abandoned most programs that make it too difficult to migrate. As you said, "ill check it out , hope its not too complicated , thanks )". Don't make the mistake of thinking your customer wants to go to a lot of trouble any more than you do. If you have a hold on the market, then you might get away with it, even if your customers otherwise hate you for it.

How should I implement a full-featured grace period or N-uses scheme to maximise sales of my small $5 social network Windows application, while encouraging continued use of a limited version by users who are never (not yet?) going to pay for it?

Crippling software is not favoured by all (especially the open-source camp), but I have to base my decision on happy users and making a living, so I have compiled the findings I side with on limiting software below.

If this is an app that will be used for a long time, go with 30 days non-nag (show "trial" in the titlebar and AboutBox, etc., but nothing that needs clicking), then nag for 7 days, then use an escalated crippling. Maybe some watermarking of the output. You probably do not need to fully disable the app. In order for the purchase/abandon decision to tip in your favor, you need to provide high-quality software, and you need to get the user "invested" before they get to that point. By "invested", I mean a combination of time, data, comfort, reliance, emotional attachment, etc..Note that this strategy won't work well for one-off apps (like business card designers) and games (they can just pick up another game and learn to like it).But for any sort of business app, productivity tool, etc., it will work.

BTW, your observation about the low price wouldn't be true with business-oriented apps or "professional-level" utilities. If it seems low-priced, people will balk. Just today, I bought a HDMI-DVI cable on Amazon (3rd-party vendor) for 30 cents. I kept looking for the "gotcha". Shipping was 3 bucks. So I bit, as I was buying a nice Tent anyway. But I really don't have high hopes for this cable. It sounds weird, but I would have been more comfortable paying $12.50.

My preferred method of limiting trial versions is through watermarking. This method works great for software that is used to produce content. E.g. my own HelpScribble and DeployMaster are used to produce help files and installers. The trial versions of these products create help files and installers without any restriction in time or functionality. But the output is watermarked. The help files have a little notice at the bottom of each topic and the installers have an extra box with a notice above the installer's window. The notices are polite messages that indicate that unpaid software was used, making the help files and installers created by the trials unsalable.. This allows people to try the software without any restrictions. Payment is only due when they want to distribute the help files or installers.

This approach obviously doesn't work for all applications. When watermarking is impossible, I tend to go with a time limit based on number of days of actual use. I never limit trials based on calendar days. I don't want somebody to install the trial, go on vacation, and come back to an expired trial.

At the end of the day, the best way to limit a trial depends on your product and your market. My own experience is with tools for programmers and other IT professionals. Somebody who makes games will likely give a very different answer (e.g. limit the trial to the first few levels or worlds of the game).

And don't forget the money-back guarantee! For me, that's the ultimate trial. When shopping for software I'll buy without trying if there's a money-back guarantee, particularly if the software was previously recommended to me. I don't have a lot of time to mess around with trial versions of various applications, particularly for low-cost utilities.

This period should give a potential customer enough time to get to like the application - and personally, I have (had) bought programms I tried out in this way, but never to get rid of nagboxes - which shows i am like the majority of people according to your link.

I would go against nagging entirely, you don't intentionally piss off your potential customers. Most of the time I would close down nag screens and not care until I reach the last day of the trial and then I would make my decision. I wouldn't cripple either. People are emotional before logical. People would sooner go in search of some other app than pay up. People are entitled, generation of critics and relentlessly demanding. I have a few ideas:

Give them X amount of days and then at the end thank them for using your app. If they don't last the trial they're not going to buy it or are really unlikely too. At the end, give them the price with a little extra on that you would donate to charity if they buy your stuff. Advertise that your customers are awesome because now X has a home to live in, or food or Y just beat cancer. Everyone wants to feel like the belong to something as well as accomplished something. Remind your users that people like them cause miracles to happen.

You could compartmentalise your app and allow people to buy whatever services suit them personally, sometimes 3 dollars is better than no dollars. People are very, very picky so allowing them to build their own version of the app creates a greater sense of control on the part of the user. They'll remember that over someone who just shoved an app in their face and demanded money or nagged them to the point of psychosis-inducing rage.

I've often downloaded apps that "look interesting" when I see them mentioned online, try them briefly to get a sense of them, and then only return to more seriously try them way later when I actually am in need. I've been burned by the "trial expired" several times, and it has cost some app sellers sales.

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AutoCAD is computer-aided design (CAD) software that is used for precise 2D and 3D drafting, design, and modeling with solids, surfaces, mesh objects, documentation features, and more. It includes features to automate tasks and increase productivity such as comparing drawings, counting, adding objects, and creating tables. It also comes with seven industry-specific toolsets for electrical design, plant design, architecture layout drawings, mechanical design, 3D mapping, adding scanned images, and converting raster images. AutoCAD enables users to create, edit, and annotate drawings via desktop, web, and mobile devices.\n"}]},"@type":"Question","name":"Who uses Autodesk AutoCAD?","acceptedAnswer":["@type":"Answer","text":"Autodesk AutoCAD is used by students, architects, designers, engineers, project managers, real estate developers, and construction professionals to create precise 2D and 3D drawings.\n"],"@type":"Question","name":"What is the difference between AutoCAD and AutoCAD LT? ","acceptedAnswer":["@type":"Answer","text":"AutoCAD LT is powerful 2D CAD software used for precision drafting and documentation. AutoCAD includes all the features of AutoCAD LT, plus additional features to benefit productivity such as 3D modeling and automation of repetitive processes. AutoCAD also lets you customize the user interface with APIs and add-on apps. With AutoCAD, users are able work more efficiently with seven industry-specific toolsets to enhance automation and productivity for tasks in architecture, mechanical design, electrical design, plant design, plumbing, converting raster images, geographic information systems, and 3D mapping.\n"],"@type":"Question","name":"Which operating system does Autodesk AutoCAD software run on?\u202f\u202f","acceptedAnswer":["@type":"Answer","text":"Autodesk AutoCAD can run on Microsoft Windows, and Apple macOS. See\u202fAutoCAD system requirements (US Site) for details.
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