Reviews
Briefing: InstallShield 10.5
- By Mike Gunderloy
- November 8, 2004
InstallShield 10.5
Macrovision
Schaumburg, Illinois
(847) 466-4000
www.installshield.com
You may recall that InstallShield was acquired by Macrovision a bit
earlier this year. That hasn't stopped the InstallShield engineers from
working on a new version, of course, and today they're releasing version
10.5 of their InstallShield Premier Edition (as well as the other
editions in the product line). I haven't had a chance to test the new
version yet, but I did chat with the folks at Macrovision about the new
features.
The first of the new features shows just a glimpse of how InstallShield
is integrating with the rest of Macrovision's offerings. With just a
couple of mouse clicks you can build a Trialware installer for your
product, so that it can be installed with the right to use for a limited
time period, after which it expires. This uses some of Macrovision's
existing technology, which they say is proof against the most common
attempts to circumvent such technology (such as rolling the clock back
or doing the install in a virtual machine).
Another significant advance here is the introduction of assemblies to
the product. These are not .NET assemblies, but an InstallShield
technology designed to make it possible to dynamically reuse components
across multiple installers. These modular components are versioned, and
can be shared between multiple installed products without anything
breaking on uninstall. Organizations shipping suites will appreciate the
flexibility that assemblies give to build multiple different product
editions with little overhead. A new scheme of local and network
repositories lets you reuse and share elements from your installations
as well.
Other new features include support for deploying MySQL databases
(similar to the existing support for SQL Server), a visual tool for
specifying changes to XML files on the target machine, and support for
the latest Microsoft installer technology (MSI 3.0). Trial downloads
should show up on the InstallShield Web site shortly. I'm looking
forward to seeing some of the new features in action.
About the Author
Mike Gunderloy has been developing software for a quarter-century now, and writing about it for nearly as long. He walked away from a .NET development career in 2006 and has been a happy Rails user ever since. Mike blogs at A Fresh Cup.