Found a good quote from Tom Brodhead referencing some of the memory issues: "Leland Smith’s genius was that he had considered all aspects of notation and broken them into categories, and then considered every possible way that a music glyph might need to be altered. As such, his program allows ...
That's an interesting find on the Adobe forums! The last post there sounds like Adobe has no interest in playing along though: "On behalf of Adobe, the definitive answer is absolutely no! The original license terms still apply. You may not redistribute those fonts. You can embed the fonts in PD...
If the company is no longer a legal entity, are you still contractually bound by the EULA? This is an interesting point. IIRC there wasn't any sort of copy protection on the software as it was a DOS program. I don't have any idea of what the legality is here, but if it's really dead and not support...
Also, if you can buy it, I always found Tom Brodhead's subroutines pretty much essential too, especially LJ, VJ, and BEAM, and used them on everything I did. https://bmt-systems.com/score/
I used to have the DOS version (last version I had was likely 3.0, 3.1?), but have no idea what happened to the disks. It does appear like you can still purchase the Windows version of WINSCORE 5.01, which I don't think really ever caught on with SCORE users: http://www.maresova.net/winscore/purchas...
Wow, there's a bunch of cool stuff in there! I actually have a hardcover copy of the the Da Capo 1972 reprint of the Playfield "An Introduction to the Skill of Musick." Mine's the 12th edition with chapters from the 13th and 14th. Pretty cool that the both the original 4th and 6th editions...
Yeah, I have a few Dorico-specific proofing steps too including a couple of bar number issues. 1) There's a bug where the saved default Layout Options don't always apply correctly. For a lot of people this affects page size but for me it often unchecks "Show bar numbers at rehearsal marks"...
Both Schirmer and Ross have good chapters on proofreading too. I assume most people here probably have Ross so check out pages A22-A24. In the late 90s/early 2000s I used to work for a woman who used the Schirmer method. I still basically use it, although I don't literally check off the letters anym...