On Wed, 2004-12-22 at 23:25 -0700, Dorian A. Monroe, II wrote: > ------Original Message----- > -From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > -[mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Craig > -White > -Sent: Tuesday, December 21, 2004 1:47 PM > -To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > -Subject: RE: No Question with practical and ethical considerations. > - > -On Tue, 2004-12-21 at 13:26 -0700, Bill Wesson wrote: > ---8<------8<--- > --- > -I am speaking of a personal opinion... > - > -If I buy a laptop with Windows 2000 (or Windows XP Professional) pre- > -installed, it is the computer that is licensed. The license is in the > -form of a sticker with the installation codes which is affixed to the > -bottom. I might be inclined to assume that THIS computer has a valid > -client license for Windows Terminal Server irrespective of the > -technicalities that you have cited. > - > -It is possible that a court of law could rule against me favoring the > -specific language of the licensing restrictions of Windows Terminal > -Server and it is possible that a court of law could agree that this > -machine has a valid license affixed to it. I am not a lawyer and I have > -not done this nor am I aware of any litigation to this topic or similar > -which could be presented as precedent. > ---- > > > I disagree. You're licensed to run Windows 2000 (or XP) on that laptop and > assuming that this OS came with a Terminal Services CAL, you are legit to > access a Terminal Server configured to allow properly licensed clients to > access it from that Windows 2000 (or XP) installation. When you wipe it and > install any other OS, or even in a dual-boot environment, the other OS would > need to have a separate CAL to access the Terminal Server. As far as the > Terminal Server is concerned, that other OS is a separate client requiring > it's own CAL, irregardless if it's running on the same hardware. Same goes > for virtual machines (MS Virtual PC, VMWare, etc) running under a host OS. > The virtual PCs have their own OS installation, and if you are accessing a > terminal server (or Exchange Server, SQL Server, etc, for that matter) the > virtual machine would need it's own CAL for that service. > > So even though your machine has Windows XP installed with a valid Terminal > Services CAL, when you boot into Linux, that Linux installation will need a > separate CAL to access the Terminal Server. The Windows XP TS CAL is only > valid when you're accessing Terminal Services from your Windows XP > installation. ---- You are stating the obvious and completely missing the point but thanks for weighing in with your reading of Microsoft's licensing restriction on Terminal Services. Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss