Hi,

Yes, it will. 

I would use a time limitation using a separate file together with a functional 
limitation, e.g. the inability to save documents. Actually, I rarely use time 
limitations for my own products, because I believe that every time a user 
starts up your software is a potential sale. I regularly get requests such as 
"please send me my license for Strõm Flow Chart Software quickly because I want 
to save my work" :-)

--
Best regards,

Mark Schonewille

Economy-x-Talk Consulting and Software Engineering
Homepage: http://economy-x-talk.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/xtalkprogrammer
KvK: 50277553

We will have room for new projects after 1 June. Contact me now and be first in 
line.

On 23 apr 2012, at 11:21, Richmond wrote:

> On 04/23/2012 11:37 AM, Mark Schonewille wrote:
>> Hi Richmond,
>> 
>> Standalones can't write to themselves and thus your standalone can't save 
>> anything in a substack. You can create a separate stack file in a different 
>> folder, e.g. application data on Windows, Preferences on Mac OS X and the 
>> Home folder on Linux and save time stamp in that stack file.
> 
> And, I suppose storing a time-stamp in a custom property will, similarly, 
> "evaporate" when a standalone is quitted?
> 


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