LOL, Peter... The EULA is often printed on the outside of a sealed envelope that contains the actual software distribution, and that's the seal that is referred to in the EULA. If there's no sealed envelope, the seal on the jewel case or CD sleeve (the software distribution media) that is the one whose breakage signifies your acceptance of the terms and conditions of a so-called "shrink wrap EULA" rather than the actual shrink-wrap on the outside box. And besides, many software publishers also post their EULAs on their website where people can do due diligence before purchasing.
My opinions only; I don't speak for Intel. Fred Ridder (fred dot ridder at intel dot com) Intel Parsippany, NJ -----Original Message----- From: Peter Gold [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2006 1:53 PM To: Ridder, Fred Cc: framers at frameusers.com; fmforosx at yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: Options for cross-grading, Mac to PC Hi, Fred: Ridder, Fred wrote: > Thanks for the information, Dov. I guess I need to be more > meticulous about reading the EULA (which we all read in > detail before we break the seal on the software distribution, > right?) > PLEASE, please tell me how to read the EULA that's on the disk or in the box without breaking the sealed shrinkwrap!<G> Regards, Peter Gold KnowHow ProServices
