Nope. That's just wrong. With rev, a company with millions of customers only buys one copy of the program.A company buys one tool, not millions of chips.
A company buys a million licenses for each tool.
Don't tell me I'm wrong unless you understand my point. That's not what I am talking about, Dan.
A company that builds software has to buy a license for every programmer. Depending on the type of software, schools buy licenses based on (a) the number of computers, (b) the number of students and teachers who use the software, or (c) the number of students and teachers who use the computers.
If Microsoft were to start using Rev to do their programming exclusively, they would be buying a ton of Rev licenses tomorrow. Unlikely, true, but a few large software development firms using Rev would boost sales dramatically. New York City School District buying licenses for student classes would do the same.
Do you know why today's high school History texts have so much info on Texas and California in them, while only a paragraph or two on Lincoln? Is it because so much History happens in those two states? Nope. It is because Texas and California have statewide textbook adoption. Publishers know how big the education market is, and they are getting filthy rich as a result.
J.
_______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
