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View Full Version : BlueMusic Upgraded to 2.0


Paul Martin
03-01-2007, 04:02 AM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.teksoftbluemusic.com/' target='_blank'>http://www.teksoftbluemusic.com/</a><br /><br /></div>"BlueMusic has been updated and we have also created a website for the product...New features:<br />• Disable ringtones while BlueMusic is on<br />• Resume your Bluetooth Audio Playback immediately after any phone call.<br />• On-call triggers for Speakerphone, Answer Call and Reject call. Use Bluemusic for more then voice routing!<br />• VoIP software compatible: use Bluemusic with Skype or other telephony-over-internet software"<br /><br /><img src="http://teksoftco.com/products/snapshots/files/bluemusic_2.0_capture_001.jpg" /><br /><br />Earlier in February, I <a href="http://www.pocketpcthoughts.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=53726">posted on version 1.0.510</a>. Since then, Teksoft has updated BlueMusic to version 2 and added some new features. <a href="http://www.teksoftco.com/index.php?section=bluemusic&tab=upgrade">Upgrades are 3.95 euros</a> for versions 1.0.310, 1.0.400 or 1.0.510. Many companies offer a free upgrade within a certain period of purchase but I couldn't find any info, so post an update if you have one.

Paul Martin
03-02-2007, 04:31 PM
If you have a "lite" version of a software and wish to go for the "pro" version i don't see any company giving it to you for free...
If you have a house purchased from a company and after two months you decide to move to a bigger one you will not just receive the key... or am i wrong? The amount of time passed from releasing one version to the other has nothing to do here. Just my two cents.

Some software companies offer a free upgrade if the software purchase was made within 30 days, some as generous as 6 months. WebIS sets the standard here. The house analogy doesn't fit because we're talking about real property, not software, though you might think of it as a house purchase with a warranty for maintenance for a certain period.

Where the amount of time figures in is because your customer doesn't know your release cycle. If they had known that a better version was coming out in 2 weeks or 4 weeks, they may have decided to hold off on their purchase instead of having to buy twice, albeit at a reduced rate for the second time.

Still, it's your software, your company, sell as you like. To each his own.