Compatibility with Windows 7

liwenna liwenna at gmail.com
Fri Jan 29 10:29:10 UTC 2010


You are very right on the looseley referring to e-prime for any of its
applications ^.^

However, I do am quite sure that on my previous university we did not
need the dongle to run e-studio (1.2). It was only needed during
installation (which was very convenient because it made it possible to
borrow the dongle overnight to install e-prime on your home computer
where you could then use it without the dongle. Netwerk access to the
university network also was not needed so I am pretty sure it worked
without).

Here at my current university the dongle is connected to a server
somewhere so that all networkconnected computers run on it.
Unfortunately connecting a homebased computer trough remote desktop
does not access that specific server so no more home e-studioing (<=
note the learning progress!).

This all, obviously, on a side note.

Have a nice weekend everyone!

liw



On Jan 28, 7:53 pm, David McFarlane <mcfar... at msu.edu> wrote:
> liwenna wrote:
> >If I am not mistaken it's actually the newer e-prime (2.0) that
> >required a dongle to run.... at least it does at my university whereas
> >at my previous university we used e-prime 1.2 and the dongle was only
> >required during installation of e-prime.
>
> Depends on what you mean by "E-Prime".  As you recall, there is no
> program called "E-Prime", rather E-Prime properly refers to a suite
> of programs.  We all (including me) have the bad habit of loosely
> referring to any program in the suite as "E-Prime" when we really
> mean something more specific like (most often) E-Studio, or E-Run, or
> E-DataAid, etc.  So here's the story as far as I can figure it out...
>
> *All* versions of E-Prime require a hardware key ("dongle") or
> network key to run *E-Studio*.  All versions of E-Prime do *not*
> require any key to run any other programs in the suite, e.g., E-Run
> or E-DataAid.  EP1 does require a key during installation, whereas
> EP2 does not.  (So far I have managed to avoid network keys, so I
> cannot say much about them.)
>
> On a side topic, over on the PST Forum every once in a while someone
> writes in with a problem with the "subject station" installation.  I
> never understand why anyone bothers with "subject station"
> installations.  Around here we just do a full install of E-Prime
> whereever we might need it.  Then, whatever station currently has the
> hardware key serves as the "development" station, and any others
> serve as "subject" and "data analysis" stations.  We can change those
> roles at will, and as I understand it this all fits within the terms
> of the license without us ever hassling with "subject stations".
>
> -- David McFarlane, Professional Faultfinder

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