It is version T2022-04-21-0715, 64 bit for Windows.
I run the installer. It is quick, and my old shortcut now installs the new version. Very nice. It even picked up the license to "Tom's Micros".
Here is how I installed it after downloading ZS-Linux-Intel-64bit-T2022-04-21-0715.zip.
mkdir /u1/Zerere cd /u1/Zerene copy the zip file into this directory copy my zerne.license file into this directory unzip ZS-Linux-Intel-64bit-T2022-04-21-0715.zipThis yields the directory "ZereneStacker". Inside that directory is an elf executable also named "ZereneStacker". What I do is to create a script /home/tom/bin/zerene with only one important line, namely:
#!/bin/sh /u1/Zerene/ZereneStacker/ZereneStackerThis works just fine. I'll note in passing that the unzip yields over 1000 files, most of them are in two directories: "jre" and "exiftool". So apparently the author is using Java, at least for the GUI part of the program. Not to my taste, but to each his own. And it works, so I have nothing to complain about.
It is now running as a 30 day trial version. To install my license is a copy and paste operation. I launch Zerene, go to Options which yields a menu. I select "Registration" and get a block into which I can copy my license. It begins with ==== and ends with the obvious line. Don't include the "License: " prefix on the first line if your file has such.
It tells me it has accepted and installed the license. And indeed when I start it the next time it tells me that it is licensed to me on a personal license and the license does not expire.
Tom's Computer Info / [email protected]