Rolf Kalbermatter Posted 20 hours ago Report Posted 20 hours ago (edited) LabVIEW 5 is almost 30 years old! It won't run on any modern computer very well if at all. Besides offering software even if that old like this is not just maybe illegal but definitely. So keep browsing your Russian crack sites but leave your offerings away from this site, please! Edited 19 hours ago by Rolf Kalbermatter Quote
Tom Eilers Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago LabView 5.1 runs prefect on a windows 11 pro. The nice thing about LabView 5.x and maybe older, that is run from an USB stick. See picture Quote
Rolf Kalbermatter Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago 4 hours ago, Tom Eilers said: LabView 5.1 runs prefect on a windows 11 pro. The nice thing about LabView 5.x and maybe older, that is run from an USB stick. See picture I know it runs (mostly), installation is a slightly different story. But that's still no justification to promote pirated software no matter how old. Quote
dadreamer Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago I have LabVIEW 5 and 6 on my USB stick too and they both run OK on Windows 10. Initially LV 5 was hanging at the start, so I had to disable multithreading: ESys.StdNParallel=0 Not that I really need LabVIEW to be on hand all the time. But sometimes it's useful to have around an advanced calculator for quick-n-dirty prototyping. And sometimes to look at how things were then. Considering the age and bugs, using these versions for serious projects is, to put it mildly, unwise. I also don't like that LabVIEW re-registers file associations for itself every time it starts, but I'm more or less used to this. I also believe, those versions didn't really need some pirate tools. Just owner's personal data and serial number were needed. If not available, it was possible to use 'an infinite trial' mode: start, click OK and do everything you want. Quote
Rolf Kalbermatter Posted 45 minutes ago Report Posted 45 minutes ago (edited) 26 minutes ago, dadreamer said: I also believe, those versions didn't really need some pirate tools. Just owner's personal data and serial number were needed. If not available, it was possible to use 'an infinite trial' mode: start, click OK and do everything you want. True there is no active license checking in LabVIEW until 7.1. And as you say, using LabVIEW 5 or 6 as a productive tool is not wise, neither is blabbing about Russian hack sites here. What someone installs on his own computer is his own business but expecting such hacks to be done out of pure love for humanity is very naive. If someone is able to circumvent the serial check somehow (not a difficult task) they are also easily able to add some extra payload into the executable that does things you rather would not want done on your computer. Edited 42 minutes ago by Rolf Kalbermatter Quote
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