Whatever kind of software you're making will probably use some open source framework or tool to do the job:
Not exact matches
I checked the
software release, and it's still an older one, so
whatever it's doing or not doing, it has not completed an update
of any
kind.
I also
kind of — I like to call it a poor man's document assembly or document origination program because you don't have to have — you can get some
of the benefits
of those more expensive and comprehensive programs with this little tool that just
kind of lives on your desktop and you just enter the characters and the beauty
of it and what makes it I think better than just using the Microsoft Word equivalent is that you can use it — it's cross-platform, so you can use it in any
software package that you happened to be running, like if you're in Clio or
whatever your timekeeping
software is, if you've got the shortcuts set up properly in TextExpander you can use it in your time entries and it will carry — it will expand the text literally to fit the criteria that you set forth and that will greatly cut down on your time spent entering time.
Todd Smith: Well, no, you're right, and that's
kind of the next point where I was going is the next decision I had to make
of course after what computer to buy, is what
software to get, and those are the days
of going and actually getting those CDs and installing the
software on your hard drive, on your 120 gigabyte hard drive, if it was that big or
whatever the size was, that was about the limit.
And you can imagine the lawyer
kind of saying
whatever, give me the indemnity, you put it in there, you know you should be vetting what you put in your code even if it's developed by a third party which open source
software would.