Office 2003 SBE EULA

A

AP

I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks.
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi A.P.,

Probably both are correct :)

OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).

===============
I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at work.
The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the software can only
be installed in one computer.

But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an additional copy
can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of the
primary user.

Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at work
which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If Microsoft website
EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new PCs to
be purchased.

Thanks. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
A

AP

Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my desktop &
notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once & for all.

However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
portable device.

At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my wife & 2
children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal outlay on
software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as opposed to a 2nd
destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable device'? I'm concerned about
the ability to activate Office 2003 (on the 2nd machine) & receive
updates/service packs (on both machines).

Thank you.
 
M

Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Either a notebook or a Tablet PC qualifies for "portable" but not a second
desktop.

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. All
unsolicited mail sent to my personal account will be deleted without
reading.

After furious head scratching, AP asked:

| Thank you Bob. I checked the version of Office 2003 SBEs on my
| desktop & notebook and both are OEM versions. That settles it once &
| for all.
|
| However, I found that the Office 2003 that I use at home is a retail
| version, & the onscreen EULA allows me to install Office 2003 on a 2nd
| portable device.
|
| At the moment I have only one desktop PC, which is also used by my
| wife & 2 children. I'm planning to buy a 2nd machine, with minimal
| outlay on software. Does a portable device mean a notebook (as
| opposed to a 2nd destkop)? What else qualifies as a 'portable
| device'? I'm concerned about the ability to activate Office 2003 (on
| the 2nd machine) & receive updates/service packs (on both machines).
|
| Thank you.
|
|
|
| "Bob Buckland ?:)" <75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com>
| wrote in message || Hi A.P.,
||
|| Probably both are correct :)
||
|| OEM editions of MS Office are licensed to a particular machine and
|| are generally not transferable. Retail editions of MS Office are
|| licensed to a person and can be installed on two computers (3 in the
|| case of the Student & Teachers 2003 Edition).
||
|| ===============
|| || I have Office 2003 Small Business Edition installed in my desktop at
|| work. The onscreen EULA (under the Help/About) mentions that the
|| software can only
|| be installed in one computer.
||
|| But the Office 2003 SBE EULA in Microsoft's web site
|| (http://www.microsoft.com/office/eula/en.mspx) says that an
|| additional copy
|| can be installed on a 2nd portable device for the exclusive use of
|| the primary user.
||
|| Please help! Which EULA is correct. I currently use a notebook at
|| work which has a separate copy of Office 2003 SBE installed. If
|| Microsoft website
|| EULA is correct, my notebook's Office 2003 can be "freed-up" for new
|| PCs to
|| be purchased.
||
|| Thanks. >>
|| --
|| Let us know if this helped you,
||
|| Bob Buckland ?:)
|| MS Office System Products MVP
||
|| *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*
||
|| For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" -
|| http://microsoft.com/events/series/administrativetipsandtricks.mspx
 

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