Shareware Programs
Malwarebytes v5.5.6.144
Autodesk SketchBook v2023
Kontakt Player v5.7.0 (R32)
Ableton Live v12.4
Avast Internet Security v26.3.10886
TeamViewer v2024
QuickTime v2024
Nero Burning ROM v28.5.1.1
pdfFactory v9.25
CyberLink Power2Go v13
Gta San Andreas v1.113
MAGIX Music Maker v2024
Poppy Playtime v0.4.3
IObit Malware Fighter v2024
WinZip System Utilities Suite v4.0.3.4
TechSmith Camtasia v2026.1.2
SketchUp v2024
ExpressVPN v14.1.0.13058
Photomatix Pro v6.1.1
Microsoft SharePoint v2023
Nero v28.5.2020.0
CloneDVD v2.9.3.8
Wondershare Filmora v2023
VSO Downloader v2024
About Shareware
Shareware is software you can try before you decide to buy. The idea is older than most current software models: a developer lets you install and run the program, use it for a while, and pay only if you choose to keep it. The trial is the point — it lets the software prove itself before any money changes hands.
Trials are limited in one of a few ways, and the limit shapes the experience. A time-limited trial works fully for a set number of days, then stops or asks for payment. A feature-limited trial runs indefinitely but keeps some abilities locked until you pay. Some programs simply show a reminder screen at each launch — the pattern people call nagware — while leaving the software otherwise usable.
Knowing which limit applies helps you judge a program fairly. A time-limited trial is best tested during a stretch when you can put it through real work, since the clock runs whether you use it or not. A feature-limited version is fine to keep installed while you decide whether the locked parts are worth the price.
Shareware is a large group here, and the quality across it varies as much as in any paid category. The licence describes how a program is sold, not how good it is. When a trial ends, weigh what the software did for you against its cost, and remove it cleanly if it did not earn the purchase.























