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Microsoft actually sells thousands of products when you look
at the inner workings of software licensing and Microsoft
non profit products are no different. It is interesting to
note that as a whole, non profit organizations mostly purchase
MS Office. Operating systems are the next most common purchase
by these organizations. Then, comes Microsoft Exchange - both
servers and CAL's. If you are wonder what a CAL is, it is
the actual end user license for something that connects to
something else, like a network server and its associated user
CAL's.
It was published several years ago that half of all the profits
at Microsoft were from the sale of Office. That is one reason
why new versions are made and this is a tricky subject. MS
would like to have a new version every year although this
would be costly for the Microsoft non profit program. But
how can this company justify a new version so frequently?
It would make the current version seem like it was a waste
of money and Microsoft doesn't want to have that distinction.
That is why the software is replaced with new versions every
few years.
If we all did not upgrade our versions and no one purchased
a newer version, everything would be fine. But as the new
version comes out, there are newer computer users who then
need computers and they get the software that goes with this
version. Purchasers, including those using the Microsoft nonprofit
program, who find they need a new copy for a new employee
get this new version. Large companies do their upgrades and
get the new versions. Over a six month period of the launch
of the new product, there are millions of users and then over
the next few years, the rest of the users end up upgrading.
Then, everyone is using this new version including non profit
organizations. Then the process starts over. Do you need a non profit computer or non profit softwarte? |