software

Easy Video Capture 1.0

cybermatrix   on 09 October 2003 - 18:54 · 1 comment & 204 views

Advertisement (Why?)
Easy Video Capture is a tool for recording your screen into AVI video. It supports recording video, audio, cursor. You can use it to record DVD, RM, VCD, or other video media into AVI file. You can use it to make slide-show training documents. You may change the options for recording, add text to video, record video with audio, choose to record mouse cursor or not, blink the area border when recording, and so on. It works on 32-bit windows.

Download: vcsetup.exe - 0.55 MB
Screenshot: >> Click here <<
News source: SoftRom.Net


"We run Citibank," Woods said. "It's not like we're going to come in and shut them down. You can either stop using the software or pay for it. It's not that big of a deal."

Oracle doesn't ignore piracy, however. It instead chooses to focus on educating customers on what they can and cannot do with the software. "I believe that most people are good people," Woods said.

Others agreed. "We operate under the philosophy that we … design all these anti-piracy moves with the honest customer in mind," said Drew McManus, director of anti-piracy operations at Adobe Software Inc.

Oracle's laid-back attitude toward software piracy is in sharp contrast to statements made by organizations like the Business Software Alliance, which has claimed that one in four pieces of commercial software used in the United States is illegal. And in a keynote speech on Monday, Macromedia Senior Vice president of Corporate Strategy Tom Hale said that approximately 17 percent of the company's activation efforts used invalid, and possibly forged, software codes.

"Reducing piracy rates can play a key role in economic development," said Robert Holleyman, presidet and chief executive of the BSA, in July. "According to a recent study conducted for the BSA, cutting the rate of software piracy in the United States to 15 percent by the end of 2006 could add $142 billion to the GDP, create more than 130,000 new high-tech jobs and generate an additional $23 billion in tax revenues.

Meanwhile, legislators such as Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., have tried to cut down on peer-to-peer file sharing as a means of combating illegal copying of copyrighted works, mainly music and movies—not software. "I think we need to be consistent," Woods said.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 1 additional comments
#1 Angel Blue01 on 11 Oct 2003 - 12:33
Shareware!

Try again!

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)