STE = Students and Teachers Edition.
--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]
Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. Due to
the (insert latest virus name here) virus, all mail sent to my personal
account will be deleted without reading.
After searching google.groups.com and finding no answer, Gregg Hill asked:
| Pardon my ignorance, but what is STE?
|
| Gregg Hill
|
| || Gregg Hill wrote:
||| Hello!
|||
||| I think I know the answer to this one (no!), but I would like to
||| confirm it. At one point in time, I think Microsoft allowed Office
||| to be installed on two computers (a laptop and a desktop, for
||| example)
||| as long as both were not in use at the same time. Does this hold
||| true for Office 2003?
|||
||| I have a user with two computers running and a KVM switch to switch
||| between the two. Technically, only one computer can be used at a
||| time. Would that allow installation of Office 2003 on both from one
||| license, or do they need two licenses?
|||
||| Gregg Hill
||
||
|| The licensing is thus: -
||
|| A desktop and a portable (two systems of the same type would require
|| two licences - /unless/ the licence was for the STE which allows
|| installation on up to three systems in any combination), providing
|| that
||
|| 1) They aren't in simultaneous use
||
|| and
||
|| 2) Are for the /exclusive/ use of the licencee.
||
|| So, if the laptop was going to be used exclusively by your wife, for
|| example, she would require her own licence.
||
|| --
|| My great-grandfather was born and raised in Elgin - did he eventually
|| lose his marbles?