Amedee
My interpretation of the conditions is that it (S&T edition) may be
installed on up to 3 PCs in the household (including any laptops that may be
taken to/from work or college). If you live with your parents (or vice
versa), then their computer may be one of the three. If they live in a
different house, then they don't qualify.
If you think that is complicated, you should try out reading the rest of
Microsoft Licensing! I've done a course with MS and I still have to pull out
the documentation to clarify the rules.
Terry
: TF shared this with us in microsoft.public.word.newusers:
:
: > To qualify for Students and Teachers Office version, you only need a
: > Teacher or Student to live in your home. You can install it and
: > activate it on up to three computers or laptops. You may continue to
: > use it even if your student stops being a student. Its drawback is
: > that it doesn't qualify for UPGRADE versions.
:
: So, my wife is a teacher, in theory this means I could install Office
: on all 3 computers we have? (my doorstop, my swerver and her lapstop)
: Without breaking *any* license agreement?
: But I can't install it on the pc of my parents? How confusing.
:
: That's the problem: you always have to be VERY VERY careful before you
: install something: am I breaking a license here or not. Very confusing,
: these legal uncertainties. I prefer a more straightforward approach:
: download once, install anywhere. See siggie.
:
: --
: Amedee Van Gasse using XanaNews 1.17.3.1
: If it has an "X" in the name, it must be Linux?
:
: How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
:
: How to Report Bugs Effectively
:
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html
: Only ask questions with yes/no answers if you want "yes" or "no" as the
: answer.
:
http://homepages.tesco.net/~J.deBoynePollard/FGA/questions-with-yes-or-n
: o-answers.html