HighTechTalks DotNet Forums  

Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student

Dotnet Academic General Discussions microsoft.public.dotnet.academic


Discuss Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student in the Dotnet Academic General Discussions forum.



Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old   
Hamish Fawns
 
Posts: n/a

Default Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 08-07-2003 , 04:32 AM






Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish


Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old   
Alfred C Thompson II
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 08-07-2003 , 04:38 PM






No you can keep using the academic edition for non-commercial purposes.

"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish




Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old   
Hamish Fawns
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 08-07-2003 , 05:50 PM



Thanks Alfred,
What exactly is the definition of "non-commercial"? I
am intending to develop a demo of a product which I hope
to find backing to make commercial. Is it OK to use the
academic edition to create the demo if I buy a full
license after getting backing?

Thanks again,
Hamish

Quote:
-----Original Message-----
No you can keep using the academic edition for non-
commercial purposes.

"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:023a01c35cbe$694e32e0$a001280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish



.


Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old   
George Conard [MSFT]
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 08-11-2003 , 02:52 PM



Actually, there are no commercial vs non-commercial restrictions in the
license agreement if you purchased Visual Studio .NET Academic at retail,
i.e., in your campus bookstore. You are free to use it as you described
below - check the EULA for more details.

--
Cheers,
-g

George Conard
Program Manager
Visual Studio .NET Academic
Microsoft Corporation

---
Please do not respond directly to this email address - it is used only in
the newsgroups.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.



"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
Thanks Alfred,
What exactly is the definition of "non-commercial"? I
am intending to develop a demo of a product which I hope
to find backing to make commercial. Is it OK to use the
academic edition to create the demo if I buy a full
license after getting backing?

Thanks again,
Hamish

-----Original Message-----
No you can keep using the academic edition for non-
commercial purposes.

"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:023a01c35cbe$694e32e0$a001280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish



.




Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old   
Jamie
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 09-30-2003 , 09:59 PM



On an information page on Microsoft the MSDE is listed as distributable with
..NET Pro, .NET Stand., and .NET Ent., but not with .NET Academic. From the
gist of what you have said in the past and here, I am likely to make the
leap that distributing the MSDE with an application is also allowed. Am I
wrong?
Giac

"George Conard [MSFT]" <gconard (AT) online (DOT) microsoft.com> wrote

Quote:
Actually, there are no commercial vs non-commercial restrictions in the
license agreement if you purchased Visual Studio .NET Academic at retail,
i.e., in your campus bookstore. You are free to use it as you described
below - check the EULA for more details.

--
Cheers,
-g

George Conard
Program Manager
Visual Studio .NET Academic
Microsoft Corporation

---
Please do not respond directly to this email address - it is used only in
the newsgroups.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no
rights.



"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:041201c35d2d$e8491140$a401280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Thanks Alfred,
What exactly is the definition of "non-commercial"? I
am intending to develop a demo of a product which I hope
to find backing to make commercial. Is it OK to use the
academic edition to create the demo if I buy a full
license after getting backing?

Thanks again,
Hamish

-----Original Message-----
No you can keep using the academic edition for non-
commercial purposes.

"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:023a01c35cbe$694e32e0$a001280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish



.






Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old   
George Conard [MSFT]
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Legalities of using a student edition of VC++ for ex-student - 10-02-2003 , 12:47 PM



that is correct.

"Jamie" <IsCquilSecyureYet_NoSPAM (AT) hotpoint (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
On an information page on Microsoft the MSDE is listed as distributable
with
.NET Pro, .NET Stand., and .NET Ent., but not with .NET Academic. From
the
gist of what you have said in the past and here, I am likely to make the
leap that distributing the MSDE with an application is also allowed. Am I
wrong?
Giac

"George Conard [MSFT]" <gconard (AT) online (DOT) microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:un5axmDYDHA.1280 (AT) tk2msftngp13 (DOT) phx.gbl...
Actually, there are no commercial vs non-commercial restrictions in the
license agreement if you purchased Visual Studio .NET Academic at
retail,
i.e., in your campus bookstore. You are free to use it as you described
below - check the EULA for more details.

--
Cheers,
-g

George Conard
Program Manager
Visual Studio .NET Academic
Microsoft Corporation

---
Please do not respond directly to this email address - it is used only
in
the newsgroups.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no
rights.



"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:041201c35d2d$e8491140$a401280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Thanks Alfred,
What exactly is the definition of "non-commercial"? I
am intending to develop a demo of a product which I hope
to find backing to make commercial. Is it OK to use the
academic edition to create the demo if I buy a full
license after getting backing?

Thanks again,
Hamish

-----Original Message-----
No you can keep using the academic edition for non-
commercial purposes.

"Hamish Fawns" <fawnha (AT) lithoptix (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:023a01c35cbe$694e32e0$a001280a (AT) phx (DOT) gbl...
Hi,
When I was a student I bought Visual C++ 7 Academic
Edition. I am no longer a student. Do I have to purchase
the full non-academic edition of the software to keep
using the product for non-commercial purposes?

Thanks,
Hamish



.








Reply With Quote
Reply




Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.