Microsoft has heard the uproar from customers over the
draconian Office 2013 licensing
limitations, and it has relented. Today,
Microsoft announced an update to Office 2013 retail licensing agreement that
should quell the uprising and force customers to put away the torches and
pitchforks.
Effective immediately, customers who purchase (or have
already purchased) the Office Home and Student 2013, Office Home and Business
2013, Office Professional 2013 suites, or any of the standalone Office 2013
applications can move the software to another computer once every 90 days.
Now the
Office 2013 licensing works like you’d expect it should. Purchasing the license
grants you the right to install the software on a single PC. If that PC breaks,
or gets lost or stolen, or you upgrade and replace it with a new one, you can
install Office 2013 on the new PC. You can also sell or transfer the license to
another user. The primary requirement under this license is that the Office
2013 software can only exist in one place, and be installed on one computer at
any given time.
While
this is a much more reasonable licensing policy for Office 2013, and it will
satisfy many Microsoft customers, the reality is that most businesses and
consumers should be choosing Office 365 instead of Office 2013 anyway.
An Office 365 subscription includes licensing for the full Office 2013 Pro
suite on up to five devices at a cost that works out to be cheaper than buying the single Office 2013
license in many cases. [PCWorld]
You can follow me on Twitter, add me to your
circles on Google+ or Subscribe to
me on facebook or YouTube. You can also
check my website and blog to keep yourself
updated with what is happening in the ever changing world of technology
No comments:
Post a Comment