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241 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
241 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
CiderPress
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==========
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A Windows utility for managing Apple II file archives and disk images.
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Visit the web site at http://a2ciderpress.com/.
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CiderPress was initially sold by faddenSoft, LLC as a shareware product,
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starting in March 2003. In March 2007, the program was released as
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open source under the BSD license. A "refresh" to modernize the code was
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done in January 2015.
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Why Bother?
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-----------
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Back in 2002 I decided it was time to learn how to write an application
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for Microsoft Windows. I had been a professional software engineer for
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many years -- including 2.5 years at Microsoft! -- but had never written
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a Windows program more complex than "Hello, world!".
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I decided to write a Windows version of GS/ShrinkIt. I had already written
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NufxLib, which handled all of the ShrinkIt stuff, so I could focus on
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writing the Windows user interface code.
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Somewhere in the early stages of the project, it occurred to me that a
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disk image isn't substantially different from a file archive. They're
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both just collections of files laid out in a well-defined manner. The
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decision to handle disk images as well as ShrinkIt archives seemed like
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a simple improvement at the time. The rest is history.
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CiderPress has allowed me to explore a variety of interesting
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technologies. It has five different ways of reading a block from physical
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media, depending on your operating system and what sort of device you're
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reading from. I was able to take what I learned from a digital signal
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processing textbook and apply it to a real-world problem (decoding Apple
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II cassette data). It is also my first Shareware product, not to mention
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the initial product of my first small business venture (faddenSoft, LLC).
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I could have written other things. No doubt they would have made more
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money. CiderPress is something that I find very useful, however, in the
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pursuit of my Apple II hobby.
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Above all, this has been a labor of love. I have tried to get the details
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right, because in the end it's the little things that mean the difference
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between "good" and merely "good enough".
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Source License
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--------------
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The source code to CiderPress is available under the BSD license. See
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the file [LICENSE.txt](LICENSE.txt) for details.
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CiderPress requires three other libraries, all of which are included as
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source code:
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- NufxLib, also available under the BSD license.
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- Zlib, available under the Zlib license.
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- libhfs, available under the GPL license.
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The license allows you to do a great many things. For example, you could
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take the source code to CiderPress, compile it, and sell it. I'm not sure
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why anyone would buy it, but you're legally allowed to do so, as long as
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you retain the appropriate copyright notice.
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If you retain libhfs, any changes you make to any part of CiderPress must
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be made available, due to the "viral" nature of the GPL license. If this
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is not acceptable, you can remove HFS disk image support from CiderPress
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(look for "EXCISE_GPL_CODE" in DiskImg.h).
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Building the Sources
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--------------------
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The current version of CiderPress is targeted for Visual Studio 2013,
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using the WinXP compatibility Platform Toolset to allow installation on
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Windows XP systems. You should be able to select Debug or Release and
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just build the entire thing. The project files have been updated so
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that VS2015 Community Edition will accept them, but the new "universal CRT"
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causes problems with WinXP, so the build files still require the older
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set of tools.
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If you want to use the static analyzer, you will need to change the
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Platform Toolset to straight Visual Studio 2013.
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A pre-compiled .CHM file, with the help text and pop-up messages,
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is provided. The source files are all included, but generation of the
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.CHM is not part of the build. If you want to update the help files,
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you will need to download the HTML Help Workshop from Microsoft, and use
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that to compile the help project in the app/Help directory.
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The installer binary is created with [DeployMaster](http://deploymaster.com/).
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Building for Linux
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------------------
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The NuFX archive and disk image manipulation libraries can be used from
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Linux. See the [Linux README](README-linux.md).
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Source Notes
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------------
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Some notes on what you'll find in the various directories.
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#### Main Application ####
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This is highly Windows-centric. My goal was to learn how to write a
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Windows application, so I made no pretense at portability. For better
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or worse, I avoided the Visual Studio "wizards" for the dialogs.
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Much of the user interface text is in the resource file. Much is not,
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especially when it comes to error messages. This will need to be addressed
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if internationalization is attempted.
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It may be possible to convert this for use with wxWidgets, which uses an
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MFC-like structure, and runs on Mac and Linux as well. The greatest barrier
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to entry is probably the heavy reliance on the Rich Edit control. Despite
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its bug-ridden history, the Rich Edit control allowed me to let Windows
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deal with a lot of text formatting and image display stuff.
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#### MDC Application ####
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MDC (Multi-Disk Catalog) was written as a simple demonstration of the
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value of having the DiskImg code in a DLL instead of meshed with the main
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application. There's not much to it, and it hasn't changed substantially
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since it was first written.
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#### DiskImg Library ####
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This library provides access to disk images. It automatically handles
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a wide variety of formats.
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This library can be built under Linux or Windows. One of my key motivations
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for making it work under Linux was the availability of "valgrind". Similar
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tools for Windows usually very expensive or inferior (or both).
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An overview of the library can be found in the
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[DiskImg README](diskimg/README.md).
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The library depends on NufxLib and zlib for access to compressed images.
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#### Reformat Library ####
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This is probably the most "fun" component of CiderPress. It converts
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Apple II files to more easily accessible Windows equivalents.
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Start in Reformat.h and ReformatBase.h. There are two basic kinds of
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reformatter: text and graphics. Everything else is a sub-class of one of
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the two basic types.
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The general idea is to allow the reformatter to decide whether or
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not it is capable of reformatting a file. To this end, the file type
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information and file contents are presented to the "examine" function
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of each reformatter in turn. The level of confidence is specified in a
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range. If it's better than "no", it is presented to the user as an option,
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ordered by the strength of its convictions. If chosen, the "process"
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function is called to convert the data.
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Bear in mind that reformatters may be disabled from the preferences menu.
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Also, when extracting files for easy access in Windows, the "best"
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reformatter is employed by the extraction code.
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Most of the code should be portable, though some of it uses the MFC
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CString class. This could probably be altered to use STL strings or plain.
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#### Util Library ####
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Miscellaneous utility functions.
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#### NufxLib and zlib ####
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These are source snapshots from [NufxLib](http://github.com/fadden/nulib2)
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and [zlib](http://www.zlib.org).
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#### DIST ####
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Files used when making a distribution, notably:
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- the DeployMaster configuration file
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- the license and README files that are included in the installer
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- redistributable Windows runtime libraries (only needed on WinXP?)
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- NiftyList data file
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Future Trouble Spots
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--------------------
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Microsoft generally does an excellent job of maintaining backward
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compatibility, but as Windows and the build tools continue to evolve it is
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likely that some things will break. The original version of CiderPress was
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written to work on Win98, using tools of that era, and quite a bit of effort
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in the 4.0 release was devoted to bringing CP into the modern era.
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In another 15 years things may be broken all over again. Some areas of
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particular concern:
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1. File + folder selection. The dialog that allows you to select a combination
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of files and folders is a customized version of the standard file dialog.
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There is no standard dialog that works for this. The original version, based
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on the old Win98-era file dialogs, worked fine at first but started to fail
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in Vista. CiderPress v4.0 provided a new implementation, based on the
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Win2K "explorer" dialog, which works well in WinXP and Win7/8. However,
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WinVista introduced a new style, and those dialogs have a very different
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structure (and don't work on WinXP). At some point it may be necessary
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to replace the dialog again.
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2. Help files. CiderPress initially used the old WinHelp system. v4.0
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switched to the newer HtmlHelp, but judging by the level of support it would
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seem that HtmlHelp is on its way out. The favored approach seems to be to
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just pop open a web browser to a web site or a document on disk. The pop-up
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help text, which currently comes out of a special section of the help file,
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would instead use MFC tooltip features, with strings coming out of the
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resource file. (This is probably more convenient and definitely more
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flexible, so switching the pop-up help messages may happen sooner.)
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3. Unicode filenames. CiderPress cannot open most files with non-ASCII,
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non-CP-1252 characters in their names (e.g. kanji). This is because the
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NufxLib and DiskImg libraries use narrow strings for filenames. The libraries
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are expected to build on Linux, so converting them is a bit of a pain. At
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some point it may be necessary to support Unicode fully. v4.0 did a lot of
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code reorganization to make this easier, as did NufxLib v3.0.
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4. Windows XP support. The default Visual Studio 2013 configuration creates
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executables that do not work in Windows XP. CiderPress uses a compatibility
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toolset and packs about 5MB of additional DLLs (mfc120u.dll, msvcr120.dll) in
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the install package to keep things working. Visual Studio 2015 shipped with a
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new "Universal CRT" that requires more effort and disk space. At some point
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it may not be possible to support WinXP, or building for WinXP will prevent
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something from working. The good news is that, for the current round of
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tools, it's possible to build a single binary that works fully on WinXP and
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later systems.
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5. Installer magic. Security improvements and changes like the Win8 "Metro"
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launcher affect the way apps are installed and launched. So far the only
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impact on CiderPress was to the file association handling (the stuff that
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allows you to double-click a file and have CiderPress open it), but it's
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likely that future OS changes will require matching app changes. The use
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of DeployMaster is helpful here, as it has been kept up-to-date with changes
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in Windows.
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