this used to be a queation of whether you use both machines at the same time. Once upon a time if you had Microsoft Office installed on an iMac and a Macbook (for exaple) it would sense (if you were networked) that you already had Office open on one computer and refuse to open it on the other. In theory at the time you could install on both if you only used one at a time... I've just re-read the paragraph above and I'm sure I didn't miss that many keystrokes. Has anyone else had similar problems with the new-type (no pun intended) keyboards? Or is the keyboard fairy just picking on me alone.
Frank. P.S. Double-checked this, (not the first bit, of course) letter perfect, typical! 2009/8/26 David Lazarus <[email protected]> > I do not think that they are too worried if you stick it on a second > machine. Though if you were really egregious and stuck it on twenty then yes > I would expect trouble. Though in 18 months time I plan getting two more > machines so the family pack would be perfect for me. At the moment I only > have one machine that would benefit anyway so I am not that pushed to > misbehave. > David > > > this used to be a queation of whether you use both machines at the same > time. Once upon a time if you had Microsoft Office installed on an iMac and > a Macbook (for exaple) it would sense (if you were networked) that you > already had Office open on one computer and refuse to open it on the other. > In theory at the time you could install on both if you only used one at a > time... > > Nowadays I'm not so sure, the law may have changed, so if you want to > install Snow Leopard on both computers it would be cheaper, not to mention > easier legally, to buy a family pack £39 for up to five machines, as > opposed to £58 for two (or one for two). > > Having perused the Apple Support pages, I still don't know what the law > relating to licencing of Snow Leopard stipulates, but I would bet that Apple > will sue the pants off you if they find out you're "misusing" a copy of > their OS. > > Frank. > > > > 2009/8/26 Nicholas Holt <[email protected]> > >> >> My question really relates to one person having a laptop and a desktop >> machine. >> I believe some licences allow software to be loaded onto both with a >> single licenece. >> But this relates to Snow Leopard iLife and iWork. >> Do I need to buy a family pack? >> Nick >> On 25 Aug 2009, at 22:18, Nicholas Holt wrote: >> >> > >> > Please could someone remind me whether one needs to buy the family >> > pack if one has an iMac and a Macbook to upgrade. >> > Many thanks >> > Nick >> > >> > >> > > >> >> >> >> >> > > > > > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Sussex Mac User Group" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/smug?hl=en-GB -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
