I just purchased the full version from totalrekall.co.uk so that my project can move forward.On Wed, 2005-11-16 at 18:24 -0700, JD Austin wrote:I have a client that wants to build a large database application on a shoestring budget so I thought I could give Rekall a try since I heard about it from the teacher in the access class I took last year. Last month I thought I'd give back to the open source community by buying one of the commercially available products. Sounds good right? In this case it went horribly wrong. I purchased the full version and the runtime from 'theKompany' and things seemed ok until I got into the thick of it and couldn't get things to work. It just didn't seem 'finished'.. so I went on the internet looking for an answer. That is when I realized that the version that theKompany is selling is from 2003! There were no warnings/disclaimers on their site, no clue whatsoever that I was buying an ancient version anywhere prior to purchase. I sent several emails to the company before I purchased, they replied but never disclosed that important information. After a little searching on Google I found the open source site that you can download the current version from ( http://rekallrevealed.org ) and downloaded the source for linux, compiled it, and ran that instead and my problems went away. Thats when it got interesting. I sent an email to theKompany asking for the current version. They said that it wasn't a high selling product and wasn't a high priority but they'd get around to it. After much searching around I found out that their rights to the product ended with version 2.2 in 2003, the current version is 2.4. They don't according to the author in the UK have the right to distribute the current version. To get the new version I have to buy it from http://totalrekall.co.uk. The new version works fairly well but the project is a no-go without windows runtimes to run it on their windows machines. theKompany/Shawn Gordon won't refund the purchase - they're taking the stance 'you downloaded it, you bought it'. I've never dealt with such an unethical company in my life! Anyone else had an experience like this?---- Anyway, I am getting prepped to do something in the db realm and I was looking at rekall and wondered about that but I want probably what everyone wants...rapid development, attractive user interface toolkit that runs on Windows and Linux (possibly just Linux) and maybe MacOS and obviously stores in something like pgsql and I keep thinking the only answer is gnue Craig
I'll keep you posted how development with Rekall goes, it looks slightly rough around the edges but will certainly save time.Rekall is now dual licensed under the GPL, theKompany and the developers retain commercial rights to continue to use the code and provide for non-GPL versions to customers and companies that want it. Rekall will be supported via a community portal www.rekallrevealed.org. The codebase will be available as source tarballs, and CVS access will also be available for those who wish to stay on the (b)leeding edge. Feedback, bug fixes and contributions are actively sought. This is meant to be totally community driven and oriented.
Pre-packeged versions, commercial licenses, run times and commercial database plug ins can still be purchased from us
-- JD Austin Twin Geckos Technology Services LLC email: jd@twingeckos.com http://www.twingeckos.com phone/fax: 480.288.8195