You can find the license in a file somewhere in the FrameMaker program directory. As I recall it allows only one user to install in two places such as a desktop and laptop, or work and home PCs.
I don't believe Adobe has ever sold floating licenses except maybe as part of large site-license deals. If people need to contribute only occasionally, you could get each of them a month-to-month subscription, and stop the subscription when they're not working on docs. On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 8:20 AM A Craig <[email protected]> wrote: > > > With my current employer, I'm back working in Word because many engineers > have to contribute to my hardware manuals and there simply isn't a budget for > the server version of Frame (which costs $15,000 US these days and is truly > overkill for my situation). > > However, the software team is quite small so I'm wondering if there is a way > I could legally leverage Frame when working with that team. Using Frame's > conditional text option to create at least 3 different software manuals > around a large core of shared text would be a godsend. > > I know you can legally install Frame on 2 machines so long as only one > machine is in use at a time. Has anyone ever tried this in order to share > Frame with another writer? > > Or can you legally install a single seat copy of Frame on a server and have > it work properly (with one user at a time)? > > > If none of these options will work, maybe I'll have to see if I can make a > business case for 2 single seats to use with the software team. _______________________________________________ This message is from the Framers mailing list Send messages to [email protected] Visit the list's homepage at http://www.frameusers.com Archives located at http://www.mail-archive.com/framers%40lists.frameusers.com/ Subscribe and unsubscribe at http://lists.frameusers.com/listinfo.cgi/framers-frameusers.com Send administrative questions to [email protected]
