Soulver T&Cs
by scotslawstudent
I am a big fan of a program called Soulver for Mac (I’ve never used it but Lifehacker says that OpalCalc is a good copy for Windows).
Soulver is basically a notepad application that lets you write out what calculations you’re doing and then does the computation next to it. I like it because my fundamental failing in maths is keeping track of what I’ve done, what I’m doing now and where I go from there. Soulver lets you type out a document, with variables and dependent answers if you want, that neatly sets out your working. It means that you don’t feed numbers into a calculator and, on going back, wonder “where did that 50p come from?”. It’s also great used as a more regular text editor to take notes where numbers are involved.
For example, the above is a question I worked out in a tax tutorial (by the way, if you rely on my figures here to calculate the dividend in your own company you’re literally crazy). I typed out the numbers again but I could also have dragged and dropped from the right hand side into the text window on the left. That has the advantage of putting in pointers which can change as the calculations they rely on change, just like a spreadsheet formula.
Soulver costs $24.95 (about £15) and, as standard for a piece of software in this is price range, tries to back away from as much liability as possible. I think this is only sensible — I found Soulver as a Mac Switcher through a recommendation from David Sparks (MacSparky), a California trial attorney who, as far as I understand, uses it at work. The Terms of Use put a $2 limit on total company liability.
Two provisions from the Terms of Use say:
The developer makes no claims for Soulver’s accuracy, reliability or correctness. You should always check the accuracy of the results, and not rely on them being correct.
Soulver should not be used in cases where errors or inaccuracies in a result would lead to death, personal injury, financial and economic losses, losses, damage to property, or any other form of damage.
I suspect that whoever wrote that had the Mars Climate Orbiter in mind when doing so. The MCO crashed because of a communication error between multiple teams — one team did their work in metric units, another team used imperial ones. The resulting disparity meant that the spacecraft crashed. Similarly, my own example of using Soulver to calculate company tax creates opportunities for some crazy liabilities. Soulver’s killer feature here, every calculation is neatly written down and stored line by line, means that there is a paper trial built up for exactly where the error happened; that’s not the same as blaming Casio when your tax return gets audited.
I think this makes a dramatic contrast to the “use at your own risk” EULA found by Michael @ Law Actually.
4dd6465fc78a86d0987870f88dffcb9c

I’d not heard of Soulver or OpenCalc before, but I’ll definitely be checking out the latter.
I’ve recently been doing some commercial work for one of the companies in the group who are about to start selling hosted SaaS packages. We’ve gone to great pains to limit what the various packages can’t be used for… nothing remotely dangerous, risky or that could result in any kind of loss, damage … so, no running nuclear plants, air traffic control towers, life support systems etc.
The examples still tickle me…
Btw, am I just being stupid, or when you go to your blog’s homepage is there not a way of clicking the most recent post title so you can go to that ‘page’ and leave a comment?
I had to into the post directly from google reader as I couldn’t find a way in. The other posts have a clickable title…
Do I just need my eyes testing? :-\
I always liked that all users of iTunes have agreed not to use it for nuclear research.
I’ve got a bit of an arms race going in Diploma — the tax stuff is going right over my head so every week I take a slightly better calculator to the tutorial to see if it’ll help. I’ve settled on bringing Soulver and it really does seem to work. If you were doing this a lot I would set up a template with whatever constants you need already marked in for speed but I find it’s good enough just to see each line of working.
The homepage stupidity is no fault of yours. I killed the layout with some images in the first Kindle post and am slowly trying to push that post off the homepage so that the layout will work again. For some reason one of the bugs is that you can’t see the latest post’s headline. It should be fixed in two posts’ time, so I’m hunting for bloggable material.
Wow… you’re blogging from your kindle?!?! Talk about living on the edge!
I like all in Soulver except price tag. For calculator that mix text with calculations I stopped on Numi (http://getnumi.info/)
I have to agree with that, when I got Soulver it was the only calculator like it on the market. I haven’t used Numi but it seems to get all the main points for $4.99. I do remember when it was free and that made it an absolute must have.