The Day Trader is designed to keep records of 
stock buys and sells and has particular use in 
keeping records for tax purposes. It is 
offered "as is" for a 100 day free trial after 
which a license must be purchased. This version
is designed for Win3.x and may not load in Win98.
A 32 bit version is available at:
      www.cowansoftware.com

When first unzipped the program files will be 
placed in the temporary directory specified in
your environment table or the directory you 
specified during the unzipping process. You 
must install the program from this directory or 
you can copy these programs over to a floppy and
install the program from the floppy. This latter 
method is suggested if you have more than one 
computer and will want both computers to have a 
licensed copy using one license.
   
To install from the temporary directory containing 
the unzipped files: from FILE : RUN browse to the 
temporary directory and run SETUP.EXE or copy these 
files to a floppy. Then browse to the floppy and 
Run SETUP.EXE making certain that the floppy is 
WRITE ENABLED. The program will load. You will be 
asked to enter your name and either an email 
address or a regular address (limit of 4 lines).

If the source media is write enabled, the 
license information will be written to the 
source disk so that you may load the program 
on a second computer or reload the program 
without re-entering the license information. 
If this media is not write enabled an error 
may be generated. You can re-create a clean 
source disk by erasing "DAYTRADE.CTL" from the 
used source disk. This file must be left in 
the program directory, however.

You can remove the program by removing the 
program directory (usually "C:\DAYTRADE") and 
removing the icons from the Program Manager. 
Comments on the program as well as suggestions 
for improvement are welcome. Send to: 
    "daytrader@cowansoftware.com".
   
While every attempt has been made to rid this 
software of glitches, you are encouraged to 
use the 100 day free trial period to assure 
that the program runs on your hardware and 
that no errors in calculation occur. Common 
sense oversight of the functioning of this 
software should be constant. In any case, the 
responsibility for error, damage, and ultimate 
financial liability lies solely with the user.
