Shareware: clunkers and winners out there
September 23, 1997
Web posted at: 4:33 p.m. EDT (1633 GMT)
By Kim Komando
Try-it-before-you-buy-it software, or shareware, really is a
great idea, isn't it? You actually get to test-drive a
program before you commit to spending your hard-earned money.
If you like a piece of shareware, you send the author a
registration fee. If you don't like the program, you trash
it.
Imagine trying to pull that one on your Lexus dealer. Just
let me drive it around town for the next month and then I'll
let you know if I really want it. Yeah, right.
But how good is the software that's being distributed as
shareware? There's nothing more frustrating than taking an
hour to download some shareware from the Internet only to
discover that the program just isn't fit for human use.
It may come as a surprise, but there really is some great,
useful shareware available on the Internet. For example, what
do you think of when you think of word processors? Microsoft
Word? WordPerfect? These are terrific programs, no doubt, but
they're also on the expensive side. Likewise, programs like
these often provide many more features than you or I are
likely to use in two lifetimes.
If you want a solid word processor at a reasonable price,
consider WordExpress from Micro Vision Development
(http://www.mvd.com) that's available for both Windows 3.x
and Windows 95. This program is short on some of the more
advanced features found in Word and WordPerfect, features
like auto-correction, but it's more than enough for the
average home user. If you decide you like the program, it'll
cost you about $50.
Whereas WordExpress has the look and feel of your typical
word processor, another shareware word processor, Yeah Write
from Word Place Inc. (http://www.wordplace.com), provides a
unique interface. This Windows 3.x/Win95 program uses
interesting color schemes and a row of tabs across the top of
the screen that's designed to make word-processing easier. At
$15, the price tag on Yeah Write is easy to handle too.
Mac users will find Scorpio, from Abbott Systems (http://www
abbottsys.com), a fast, efficient word processor. It offers
all the features you'd want in a basic processor and makes a
nice replacement for SimpleText too. If you decide you like
Scorpio, it's just $29 to register.
Before you get too excited about any of these, I should warn
you that there is a downside. As our computers become more
interconnected, the ability to exchange documents becomes
more important. That's why everyone at your workplace
probably uses the same word processor, so one person can open
and edit a document created by another person.
Many shareware word-processing programs save documents in
their own formats. That means, for example, that if you write
a letter in WordExpress and then e-mail it as an attachment
to your sister in Boise who uses Microsoft Word, she's going
to have a hard time reading it.
To work around that, you can save your documents as ASCII
text, but then you lose a lot in the way of formatting, bold,
italics, columns and the like.
The truth is that when you surf the Net for shareware, you
can find more programs than you can shake a mouse at, and
you're likely to come up with a few clunkers.
But the same is true when you make a trip to the local
software store. At least when you download a program from the
Internet and decide it stinks, you don't have to worry about
arguing with some salesclerk about the store's return policy.
That's a winner in my book.
(Kim Komando can be reached via e-mail at komando@komando.com)
(c) 1997, Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Los Angeles Times
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