Cài đặt Steam
đăng nhập
|
ngôn ngữ
简体中文 (Hán giản thể)
繁體中文 (Hán phồn thể)
日本語 (Nhật)
한국어 (Hàn Quốc)
ไทย (Thái)
Български (Bungari)
Čeština (CH Séc)
Dansk (Đan Mạch)
Deutsch (Đức)
English (Anh)
Español - España (Tây Ban Nha - TBN)
Español - Latinoamérica (Tây Ban Nha cho Mỹ Latin)
Ελληνικά (Hy Lạp)
Français (Pháp)
Italiano (Ý)
Bahasa Indonesia (tiếng Indonesia)
Magyar (Hungary)
Nederlands (Hà Lan)
Norsk (Na Uy)
Polski (Ba Lan)
Português (Tiếng Bồ Đào Nha - BĐN)
Português - Brasil (Bồ Đào Nha - Brazil)
Română (Rumani)
Русский (Nga)
Suomi (Phần Lan)
Svenska (Thụy Điển)
Türkçe (Thổ Nhĩ Kỳ)
Українська (Ukraine)
Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
It's been my experience that when dealing with programs about movie/novel writing, the ones that work on donation are superior to the programs that demand payment up front for theirs.
However, the price they are asking is decent, not amazing, but decent. At 15.00 it would even be better and if they make constant updates, would make the payment worthwhile. Otherwise, there is a ton of free/donation programs available.
If MovieWriterPro actually is based on Celtx code, I'd assume it's complying with their license. If Celtx are only interested in selling subscriptions anymore, they probably don't really mind someone else taking up the perpetually licensed business that they left behind anyway.
MovieWriterPro is very different, it's easy to see it's not at all the same software and code
I created MovieWriterPro because I didn't like how the others screenwriting softwares are
Wouldn't it be your job to prove they did copy the code?