Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-07-23 Thread Henry E Schaffer
Bill writes:
> ... I saw the reference to the Software Meeting in Richmond on August
> 11th, and am curious if anyone has anymore information on this event.

  This would be the "Virginia Software Summit", and I think that
"Sharon P. Pitt"  is the organizer.

  You may also be interested in the "1st Annual Summit on
Cloud-Delivered Software: Emerging Licensing Trends and Best Practices,"
NC State University, January 21-22, 2010,

http://www.ncsu.edu/it/open_source/summit-topics.html

--henry schaffer


Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-07-23 Thread IIT VCL
We are also finding that our implementation plans for a VCL at Illinois
Institute of Technology are being hampered by challenges with software
licensing. I saw the reference to the Software Meeting in Richmond on August
11th, and am curious if anyone has anymore information on this event.

Thanks,
Bill Ornt
o...@iit.edu
Operations Manager, Technical services

On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 3:51 PM, Mark Gardner  wrote:

> Dave,
>
>  On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 3:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. 
> wrote:
>
>>  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, but
>> licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL pilot
>> project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can share
>> licensing details of software that is being provided to students in a VCL
>> environment.
>>
> [snip]
>
>>   The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow us
>> to allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal machine, but
>> this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL implementation, so we
>> would like to learn more about licensing at other places that have
>> implemented a VCL to check with what vendors are telling us.  If you have a
>> licensing manager who would be willing to talk to our licensing manager,
>> please send  me contact info.
>>
> The VAVCL group meet last year and discussed software licensing. I believe
> John Krallman from Virginia Tech attended. There is also another meeting
> coming up in August. You can contact Sharon Pitt  at George
> Mason University who can give you more details but here is the invitation I
> received:
>
> *"Current software licensing models can be barriers to consumer-orientated
> technology services.  On August 11, 2010, you are invited to discuss new
> software licensing models that allow us to serve faculty, staff and students
> in innovative, improved and more cost effective ways.  This statewide
> software summit will be held at Virginia Commonwealth University in
> Richmond, VA from 9:30am - 3:30pm. More information, including registration
> information, will be forthcoming.  In the meantime, please hold the date."
> *
>
> I also believe that NC State has done quite a bit with licensing in the
> process of developing the VCL approach. You may be able to contact Harry
> Schaffer or others at NCSU for more information. (Sorry, I don't have any
> special insights into the issues of licensing.)
>
> Mark
>
> --
> Mark Gardner
> --
>


Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-04 Thread Alan D. Cabrera
Thanks guys!


Regards,
Alan

On Jun 3, 2010, at 11:24 AM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:

>  
> We don’t have a problem with the license for the VCL software.
>  
> What we are finding is that the constraints on vendor software licenses for 
> products that we want to run on the VMs could significantly limit how useful 
> the VCL is in practice.  And it is not that the vendors are not understanding 
> the VCL, but rather telling us that the ownership (university owned or 
> student owned) of the machine being used to access the VMs factors into what 
> is allowed by our licenses.
>  
> Dave
>  
> From: Alan D. Cabrera [mailto:l...@toolazydogs.com] 
> Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2010 1:53 PM
> To: vcl-user@incubator.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project
>  
>  
> On Jun 2, 2010, at 12:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:
> 
> 
> Hi,
>  
>   I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, but 
> licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL pilot 
> project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can share 
> licensing details of software that is being provided to students in a VCL 
> environment.
>  
>   We are finding that software vendors understand the VCL concept.  In 
> general, licenses allow the software to run on university owned machines, so 
> it's legal to run in a VM.  Where some vendors have problems is providing 
> access to this software from student (or any machines not owned by the 
> university) machines.  Some vendors don't have a problem with this, but some 
> tell us that this is not allowed.  It doesn't make a lot of sense to me - 
> it's not a problem for a student to access the VCL from a university owned PC 
> in a lab, but is a problem for the student to access the VCL from a machine 
> owned by a student?
>  
>   The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow us to 
> allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal machine, but 
> this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL implementation, so we 
> would like to learn more about licensing at other places that have 
> implemented a VCL to check with what vendors are telling us.  If you have a 
> licensing manager who would be willing to talk to our licensing manager, 
> please send  me contact info.
>  
> Do I understand correctly when I say that you do not have a licensing problem 
> installing the core VCL, VCL-2.1 as distributed from the Apache Software 
> Foundation, but have discovered licensing issues w/ subsequent vendor 
> specific add-ons?
>  
>  
>  
> Regards,
> Alan
>  



RE: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-03 Thread Woods, David M. Dr.

We don't have a problem with the license for the VCL software.

What we are finding is that the constraints on vendor software licenses for 
products that we want to run on the VMs could significantly limit how useful 
the VCL is in practice.  And it is not that the vendors are not understanding 
the VCL, but rather telling us that the ownership (university owned or student 
owned) of the machine being used to access the VMs factors into what is allowed 
by our licenses.

Dave

From: Alan D. Cabrera [mailto:l...@toolazydogs.com]
Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2010 1:53 PM
To: vcl-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project


On Jun 2, 2010, at 12:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:


Hi,

  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, but licensing 
issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL pilot project, so I would 
be interested in talking to anyone who can share licensing details of software 
that is being provided to students in a VCL environment.

  We are finding that software vendors understand the VCL concept.  In general, 
licenses allow the software to run on university owned machines, so it's legal 
to run in a VM.  Where some vendors have problems is providing access to this 
software from student (or any machines not owned by the university) machines.  
Some vendors don't have a problem with this, but some tell us that this is not 
allowed.  It doesn't make a lot of sense to me - it's not a problem for a 
student to access the VCL from a university owned PC in a lab, but is a problem 
for the student to access the VCL from a machine owned by a student?

  The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow us to 
allow students to access the VCL from the student's personal machine, but this 
would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL implementation, so we would 
like to learn more about licensing at other places that have implemented a VCL 
to check with what vendors are telling us.  If you have a licensing manager who 
would be willing to talk to our licensing manager, please send  me contact info.

Do I understand correctly when I say that you do not have a licensing problem 
installing the core VCL, VCL-2.1 as distributed from the Apache Software 
Foundation, but have discovered licensing issues w/ subsequent vendor specific 
add-ons?



Regards,
Alan



Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-03 Thread Aaron Peeler
Sorry Allen, I reread your statement and Yes that is correct. No issues 
with ASF licenses but problems with vendor related applications.

Aaron

On 6/3/10 2:05 PM, Aaron Peeler wrote:
No actually this is with the various software applications like SAS, 
Office, Adobe that are installed within the VCL environments. The 
environments that VCL provisions consist of an OS(windows,linux, etc) 
plus some set of applications, then a user (such as a student) request 
use of that environment through VCL web interface.  Some windows based 
application vendors have a hard time understanding that the 
application is running remotely on hardware owned by said University 
or business, and not on the end-user's machine.


Aaron



On 6/3/10 1:53 PM, Alan D. Cabrera wrote:


On Jun 2, 2010, at 12:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:


Hi,
  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, 
but licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL 
pilot project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can 
share licensing details of software that is being provided to 
students in a VCL environment.
  We are finding that software vendors understand the VCL concept.  
In general, licenses allow the software to run on university owned 
machines, so it's legal to run in a VM.  Where some vendors have 
problems is providing access to this software from student (or any 
machines not owned by the university) machines.  Some vendors don't 
have a problem with this, but some tell us that this is not 
allowed.  It doesn't make a lot of sense to me - it's not a problem 
for a student to access the VCL from a university owned PC in a lab, 
but is a problem for the student to access the VCL from a machine 
owned by a student?
  The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow 
us to allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal 
machine, but this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL 
implementation, so we would like to learn more about licensing at 
other places that have implemented a VCL to check with what vendors 
are telling us.  If you have a licensing manager who would be 
willing to talk to our licensing manager, please send  me contact info.


Do I understand correctly when I say that you do not have a licensing 
problem installing the core VCL, VCL-2.1 as distributed from the 
Apache Software Foundation, but have discovered licensing issues w/ 
subsequent vendor specific add-ons?




Regards,
Alan




--

Aaron Peeler
Program Manager
Virtual Computing Lab
NC State University
aaron_pee...@ncsu.edu
919-513-4571



--

Aaron Peeler
Program Manager
Virtual Computing Lab
NC State University
aaron_pee...@ncsu.edu
919-513-4571



Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-03 Thread Aaron Peeler
No actually this is with the various software applications like SAS, 
Office, Adobe that are installed within the VCL environments. The 
environments that VCL provisions consist of an OS(windows,linux, etc) 
plus some set of applications, then a user (such as a student) request 
use of that environment through VCL web interface.  Some windows based 
application vendors have a hard time understanding that the application 
is running remotely on hardware owned by said University or business, 
and not on the end-user's machine.


Aaron



On 6/3/10 1:53 PM, Alan D. Cabrera wrote:


On Jun 2, 2010, at 12:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:


Hi,
  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, but 
licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL pilot 
project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can share 
licensing details of software that is being provided to students in a 
VCL environment.
  We are finding that software vendors understand the VCL concept.  
In general, licenses allow the software to run on university owned 
machines, so it's legal to run in a VM.  Where some vendors have 
problems is providing access to this software from student (or any 
machines not owned by the university) machines.  Some vendors don't 
have a problem with this, but some tell us that this is not allowed.  
It doesn't make a lot of sense to me - it's not a problem for a 
student to access the VCL from a university owned PC in a lab, but is 
a problem for the student to access the VCL from a machine owned by a 
student?
  The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow 
us to allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal 
machine, but this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL 
implementation, so we would like to learn more about licensing at 
other places that have implemented a VCL to check with what vendors 
are telling us.  If you have a licensing manager who would be willing 
to talk to our licensing manager, please send  me contact info.


Do I understand correctly when I say that you do not have a licensing 
problem installing the core VCL, VCL-2.1 as distributed from the 
Apache Software Foundation, but have discovered licensing issues w/ 
subsequent vendor specific add-ons?




Regards,
Alan




--

Aaron Peeler
Program Manager
Virtual Computing Lab
NC State University
aaron_pee...@ncsu.edu
919-513-4571



Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-03 Thread Alan D. Cabrera


On Jun 2, 2010, at 12:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:


Hi,

  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response,  
but licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL  
pilot project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can  
share licensing details of software that is being provided to  
students in a VCL environment.


  We are finding that software vendors understand the VCL concept.   
In general, licenses allow the software to run on university owned  
machines, so it's legal to run in a VM.  Where some vendors have  
problems is providing access to this software from student (or any  
machines not owned by the university) machines.  Some vendors don't  
have a problem with this, but some tell us that this is not  
allowed.  It doesn't make a lot of sense to me - it's not a problem  
for a student to access the VCL from a university owned PC in a lab,  
but is a problem for the student to access the VCL from a machine  
owned by a student?


  The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow  
us to allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal  
machine, but this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL  
implementation, so we would like to learn more about licensing at  
other places that have implemented a VCL to check with what vendors  
are telling us.  If you have a licensing manager who would be  
willing to talk to our licensing manager, please send  me contact  
info.


Do I understand correctly when I say that you do not have a licensing  
problem installing the core VCL, VCL-2.1 as distributed from the  
Apache Software Foundation, but have discovered licensing issues w/  
subsequent vendor specific add-ons?




Regards,
Alan



Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-03 Thread Aaron Peeler

Hello Dave,
As Mark mentioned there are some who have spent more time on this than 
others and I have to say there is not a clear cut answer, as your 
finding out one has to deal with it on a vendor by vendor basis.


Many vendors including MS are having trouble defining licensing terms 
within cloud computing solutions. We are usually successfully once we 
have explained the software is running on university owned machines. I 
will provide you with the contact info of our NCSU license coordinator 
off-list and you can contact him directly .


Aaron

On 6/2/10 4:51 PM, Mark Gardner wrote:

Dave,

On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 3:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. 
mailto:woods...@muohio.edu>> wrote:


I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response,
but licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our
VCL pilot project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone
who can share licensing details of software that is being provided
to students in a VCL environment.

[snip]

 The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to
allow us to allow students to access the VCL from the student’s
personal machine, but this would add a lot to the cost of a full
scale VCL implementation, so we would like to learn more about
licensing at other places that have implemented a VCL to check
with what vendors are telling us.  If you have a licensing manager
who would be willing to talk to our licensing manager, please
send  me contact info.

The VAVCL group meet last year and discussed software licensing. I 
believe John Krallman from Virginia Tech attended. There is also 
another meeting coming up in August. You can contact Sharon Pitt 
mailto:sp...@gmu.edu>> at George Mason University who 
can give you more details but here is the invitation I received:


/"Current software licensing models can be barriers to 
consumer-orientated technology services.  On August 11, 2010, you are 
invited to discuss new software licensing models that allow us to 
serve faculty, staff and students in innovative, improved and more 
cost effective ways.  This statewide software summit will be held at 
Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA from 9:30am - 3:30pm. 
More information, including registration information, will be 
forthcoming.  In the meantime, please hold the date."/


I also believe that NC State has done quite a bit with licensing in 
the process of developing the VCL approach. You may be able to contact 
Harry Schaffer or others at NCSU for more information. (Sorry, I don't 
have any special insights into the issues of licensing.)


Mark

--
Mark Gardner
--



--

Aaron Peeler
Program Manager
Virtual Computing Lab
NC State University
aaron_pee...@ncsu.edu
919-513-4571



Re: Licensing aspects of a VCL project

2010-06-02 Thread Mark Gardner
Dave,

On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 3:09 PM, Woods, David M. Dr. wrote:

>  I've asked about this before, and didn't get a lot of response, but
> licensing issues are turning out to be a major issue in our VCL pilot
> project, so I would be interested in talking to anyone who can share
> licensing details of software that is being provided to students in a VCL
> environment.
>
[snip]

>  The vendors would be happy to sell us additional licenses to allow us to
> allow students to access the VCL from the student’s personal machine, but
> this would add a lot to the cost of a full scale VCL implementation, so we
> would like to learn more about licensing at other places that have
> implemented a VCL to check with what vendors are telling us.  If you have a
> licensing manager who would be willing to talk to our licensing manager,
> please send  me contact info.
>
The VAVCL group meet last year and discussed software licensing. I believe
John Krallman from Virginia Tech attended. There is also another meeting
coming up in August. You can contact Sharon Pitt  at George
Mason University who can give you more details but here is the invitation I
received:

*"Current software licensing models can be barriers to consumer-orientated
technology services.  On August 11, 2010, you are invited to discuss new
software licensing models that allow us to serve faculty, staff and students
in innovative, improved and more cost effective ways.  This statewide
software summit will be held at Virginia Commonwealth University in
Richmond, VA from 9:30am - 3:30pm. More information, including registration
information, will be forthcoming.  In the meantime, please hold the date."*

I also believe that NC State has done quite a bit with licensing in the
process of developing the VCL approach. You may be able to contact Harry
Schaffer or others at NCSU for more information. (Sorry, I don't have any
special insights into the issues of licensing.)

Mark

-- 
Mark Gardner
--