On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 12:20:27 +0800, Ricky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Beg to differ. Most offices could afford the P25,000 for MS Office. They 
> simply choose not to because they are aware of illegal aleternatives. Home 
> users have plenty of tools available (including Open Office for Windows) at a 
> reasonable price.

Not really. Spilling out $500 for one machine is already painful
enough - multiply that by the number of machines to install MS Office,
repeat the process every few years and you're looking for a fast way
to bankruptcy. That's not yet including new licenses (which costs
around $300 - or you can go the $200 route for OEM installations but
you upgrade your hardware as well...)
 
> I agree however that effective enforcement would make it easier for 
> alternative software to be appreciated.

This is going to be one real tough battle. Contraband software hurts
both open source and proprietary software sectors.

-- 
Paolo Alexis Falcone
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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