</%shared>
<%def downloadurl><%args>
$leaf
-$test => 1
+$test => 0
# ^ change this to change the default version
</%args><%perl>
my $download_version= $test ? '/test' : '';
<h3>Installing and running on Linux</h3>
Download
-<& downloadurl, leaf => 'jarrg.tar.gz' &>
+<& downloadurl, leaf => 'jarrg-linux.tar.gz' &>
and unpack it. You run jarrg from the command line. Change
(<code>cd</code>) to the top level <code>jarrg</code> directory
which was created when you unpacked the tarball, and then run
<h2>How does it work? Is it a violation of the Terms of Service?</h2>
+JARRG (and the old OCR clients) comply with Three Rings' official
+<a href="http://yppedia.puzzlepirates.com/Official:Third_Party_Software">Third Party Software Policy</a>.
+
+<p>
+
Essentially, JARRG is a specialised "screen reader" which instead of
reading information out loud, uploads it to the YARRG and PCTB
databases.
<h2><a name="source">Authorship, source code and other versions</a></h2>
Thanks to Burninator for writing the core of the JARRG client. Ian
-Jackson and Owen Dunn adapted it to improve the installation setup (in
-particular, to avoid modifying any of the YPP client's startup files).
-Owen Dunn added support for uploading to YARRG, updated the build
-system, and wrote a Windows installer.
+Jackson and Owen Dunn adapted it to fix bugs and to improve the
+installation setup (in particular, to avoid modifying any of the YPP
+client's startup files). Owen Dunn added support for uploading to
+YARRG, updated the build system, and wrote a Windows installer.
<p>
JARRG is
Copyright 2006-2009 Burninator,
Copyright 2009-2010 Owen Dunn and
-Copyright 2009-2010 Ian Jackson.
+Copyright 2009-2011 Ian Jackson.
It is Free Software with <strong>NO WARRANTY</strong>, released under
the MIT-style two-clause licence.
<p>
-The download directory can contains other versions (eg unreleased test
-versions), which you can see here:
+The code for the downloadable binaries is in
+in <& downloadurl, leaf=>'jarrg-source.tar.gz' &>.
+The download directory also sometimes contains other versions
+(eg unreleased test versions), which you can see here:
<& downloadurl, leaf => '', test => 0 &>
<p>
-The source code for the downloadable released binaries is in the
-<&| downloadurl, leaf=>'jarrg.tar.gz' &>Linux tarball</&>.
We maintain JARRG in git, and you can get
source code for recent and perhaps unreleased versions from one of:
<pre>