Thank you for acquiring a copy of xv, a pretty nifty X program. I hope you enjoy using it, as I've enjoyed writing it.

The latest version of xv is available on the web at http://www.trilon.com/xv and via anonymous ftp at ftp://ftp.trilon.com/pub/xv/. If you're not sure if you have the latest version, or you are missing the source or documentation for xv, please pick up the latest version of the xv distribution.

xv Licensing Information

xv is shareware for personal use only.

You may use xv for your own amusement, and if you find it nifty, useful, generally cool, or of some value to you, your registration fee would be greatly appreciated. $25 is the standard registration fee, though of course, larger amounts are quite welcome. Folks who donate $40 or more can receive a printed, bound copy of the xv manual for no extra charge. If you want one, just ask. Be sure to specify the version of xv that you are using!

Commercial, government, and institutional users must register their copies of xv.

This does not mean that you are required to register xv just because you play with it on the workstation in your office. That falls under the heading of 'personal use'. If you are a systems administrator, you can put xv up in a public directory for your users' amusement. Again, 'personal use', albeit plural.

On the other hand, if you use xv in the course of doing your work, whatever your 'work' may happen to be, you must register your copy of xv . (Note: If you are a student, and you use xv to do classwork or research, you should get your professor/teacher/advisor to purchase an appropriate number of copies.)

xv licenses are $25 each. You should purchase one license per workstation, or one per xv user, whichever is the smaller number. xv is not sold on a 'number of concurrent users' basis. If xv was some $1000 program, yes, that would be a reasonable request, but at $25, it's not. Also, given that xv is completely unlocked, there is no way to enforce any 'number of concurrent users' limits, so it isn't sold that way.

Printed and bound copies of the 130-ish page xv manual are available for $15 each. Note that manuals are only sold with, at minimum, an equal number of licenses. (e.g. if you purchase 5 licenses, you can also purchase up to 5 copies of the manual)

The source code to the program can be had (as a compressed 'tar' file split over a couple 3.5" MS-DOS formatted floppies) for $15, for those who don't have ftp capabilities.

Orders outside the US and Canada must add an additional $5 per manual ordered to cover the additional shipping charges.

Checks, money orders, and purchase orders are accepted. Credit cards are not. All forms of payment must be payable in US Funds. Checks must be payable through a US bank (or a US branch of a non-US bank). Purchase orders for less than $50, while still accepted, are not encouraged.

All payments should be payable to 'John Bradley', and mailed to:

John Bradley
1053 Floyd Terrace
Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 USA

Site Licenses

If you are planning to purchase 10 or more licenses, site licenses are available, at a substantial discount. Site licenses let you run xv on any and all computing equipment at the site, for any purpose whatsoever. The site license covers the current version of xv, and any versions released within one year of the licensing date. You are also allowed to duplicate and distribute an unlimited number of copies of the xv manual, but only for use within the site. Covered versions of the software may be run in perpetuity.

Also, it should be noted that a 'site' can be defined as anything you'd like. It can be a physical location (a room, building, location, etc.), an organization (a workgroup, department, division, etc.) or any other logical grouping ("the seventeen technical writers scattered about our company", etc.). The site license cost will be based on your estimate of the number of xv users or workstations at your site, whichever is the smaller number.

If you are interested in obtaining a site license, please contact the author via electronic mail or FAX (see below for details). Send information regarding your site (the name or definition of the 'site', a physical address, a fax number, and an estimate of the number of users or workstations), and we'll get a site license out to you for your examination.

Copyright Notice

xv is Copyright 1989, 1994 by John Bradley

Permission to copy and distribute xv in its entirety, for non-commercial purposes, is hereby granted without fee, provided that this license information and copyright notice appear in all copies.

If you redistribute xv, the entire contents of this distribution must be distributed, including the README, and INSTALL files, the sources, and the complete contents of the 'docs' directory.

Note that distributing xv 'bundled' with any commercial product is considered to be a 'commercial purpose'.

Also note that any copies of xv that are distributed must be built and/or configured to be in their 'unregistered copy' mode, so that it is made obvious to the user that xv is shareware, and that they should consider registering, or at least reading this information.

The software may be modified for your own purposes, but modified versions may not be distributed without prior consent of the author.

This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the author be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software.

If you would like to do something with xv that this copyright prohibits (such as distributing it with a commercial product, using portions of the source in some other program, distributing registered copies, etc.), please contact the author (preferably via email). Arrangements can probably be worked out.

The author may be contacted via:

US Mail:
John Bradley
1053 Floyd Terrace
Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
USA
 
FAX:
(610) 520-2042

Electronic Mail regarding xv should be sent to one of these three addresses:

xv@trilon.com - general xv questions
xvbiz@trilon.com - all xv licensing questions
xvtech@trilon.com - bug reports, technical questions

Please do not send electronic mail directly to the author, as he gets more than enough as it is.