Hi Ladela,
Thanks for your prompt reply – it is appreciated.
Of course, I understand that almost everyone offers a crippled version of their plugins these days – that’s well understood: you have to tempt people to try the software with enough functionality for them to get used to it and consider spending money. And your plugin is very good, I’m sure. It seems to me that by preventing the user connecting to a Google calendar at all might be shooting yourself in the foot though: if we’re prevented from being able to make any use of the product whatsoever, there is no opportunity to show it to the client and prepare them to pay for ‘yet another’ plugin: what they cannot see in action *at all* they have no ability to assess.
I apologise for my outburst: but if had known I would not be able to make any use of the product whatsoever – if you had warned me of that upfront (in other words, that there is no ‘Lite’ version, maybe I could have spent my 40-minute install attempt comparing your product with others.
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