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Get in touchHorses in Training is an institution in racing - an indispensable tool for every racing enthusiast.
Compiled in an easy-to-follow style, it is an encyclopaedia of invaluable information on the horses each trainer has in their care, with around 18,000* horses and 550* trainers. The book lists alphabetically British, Irish and French trainers, their horses with owner and breeding, foaling dates of two-year-olds and the trainer's contact details.
Fully indexed and numbering around 680* pages, it includes around 150* pages of key statistics, covering everything from big-race winners to trainer and jockey tables, fixtures and racecourse information. The book is edited by Graham Dench, a former Racing Post senior reporter and form book editor.
* Estimated numbers
Access to DRM (Digital Rights Management) controlled content is managed by licences defined by the content owner together with general device policies. Please see our restrictions below:
Our current DRM licence for PDFs is 10 devices. To use a new device after this limit is reached, an older device needs to be de-authorised and cannot be used to access the content after this. This limitation prevents users from sharing their accounts with groups of people to grant them access to the purchased content while allowing legitimate customers to use multiple devices for the content.
The maximum number of times that devices can be authorised is set to 10 per year. This means this limit is reached once a certain number of devices have been authorised for a certain user account irrespective of whether or not some or all devices have been de-authorised again. So it is possible to reach the “Maximum annual devices” without reaching the “Maximum concurrent devices” or “content licenses”. This limitation prevents fraudulent users from sharing their accounts and de-authorising their devices after consumption while still allowing legitimate customers to use up to 10 different devices (while not exceeding other limitations such as the concurrently active licences and maximum concurrent devices). Once the maximum annual device authentications are reached, the user has to wait until the annual time frame from the first authenticated device from one year back is reached so a new device can be authenticated.
Under the current licence, the DRM protected PDFs are restricted to ensure they cannot be exported or printed.
This is the time frame a device cannot be re-authorised after being de-authorised. Enforcing this time frame prevents fraudulent users to “bounce” content licences with limitations on concurrently active devices between two or more devices by de-authorising the currently not in-use devices only to re-authorise them on use. Currently the de/re-authorisation lockout time is set to 12 hours.