If you are in doubt for any reason, this is where you need to work with
a lawyer in your own jurisdiction to determine the legality.
None of us are lawyers, so any advice we give should be taken with a
grain of salt. I don't think VMware will come after you though for
using it to test Ubuntu
Thank you for taking the time to reply. This is sort of what I was thinking
when I asked the question, but it's still close enough to a problem that
I'm worried about it. In addition, I intend on using Ubuntu for commercial
use in the not-too-distant future, so I'd rather not risk getting myself on
Not a lawyer, so grain of salt.
Ubuntu, the OS, is not a commercial product by itself. Ubuntu is offered as
a free and open source OS. If you are testing non-commercial offerings of
Ubuntu, as part of community work, then it should be fine to use VMWare
Player, Virtualbox, or other items for non-c
Thanks, that's what I needed to know! Virt-manager is more than sufficient
for my needs, and I can always cough up the $150-$200 if I really want to
do VMware testing.
Thank you for your time and help!
On Fri, May 13, 2022 at 3:51 AM Shane O'Sullivan
wrote:
> It's a breach of the EULA. I would
I am digging deep into the world of Ubuntu development and am trying to
make sure my alpha and beta testing is as effective as possible. I also
don't want to cash out an arm and a leg for expensive software to do so.
I've been using virt-manager (QEMU/KVM) for testing on virtual machines,
and while