On 2/27/01, Jeffry Houser penned:
If you
want to get sneaky, just provide ColdFusion hosting, with SQL Server
databases thrown in for free. That's not much different than giving away
Internet Explorer with your purchase of windows, is it? Sure, you don't
pay (directly) for IE, but MS had to
Yes, you can. ColdFusion is the main user of the database at that point. I
believe this clause is reffering to you setting up a SQL server and letting
other companies connect to it as a production database for there company,
not for web production. Not the best articulator, but hope this
Not a direct answer but a lead perhaps. The Q/A section references a
"Commercial Licensing Program".
Question:
Licensing Can I use Processor Licenses to commercially host applications
running on .NET Enterprise Server products?
Answer:
Microsoft does offer Processor Licenses for .NET Enterprise
At 01:30 PM 02/27/2001 -0500, you wrote:
Hi all. Sorry for the OT post. Just got my brand new SQL Server 2000
with 1 processor license in the mail and promptly read over the
license. What in Gawd's name is this supposed to mean?
NO RENTAL/NO COMMERCIAL HOSTING. You may not rent, lease, lend,
On 2/27/01, Christian L. Watt penned:
Yes, you can. ColdFusion is the main user of the database at that point. I
believe this clause is reffering to you setting up a SQL server and letting
other companies connect to it as a production database for there company,
not for web production. Not the
- Original Message -
From: "Jeffry Houser" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2001 12:01 AM
NO RENTAL/NO COMMERCIAL HOSTING. You may not rent, lease, lend, or
provide commercial hosting services with the Product.
So, did I just throw away 4k? Can SQL Server not be
Send it back, and use PostgreSQL.
Send it back. There are a lot of databases out there.
What is your required feature set?
Bud wrote:
On 2/27/01, Christian L. Watt penned:
Yes, you can. ColdFusion is the main user of the database at that point. I
believe this clause is reffering to
- Original Message -
From: "Bud" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2001 9:30 PM
Nope. I just got off the phone with them. You have to sign up for the
Application Service Provider's licensing program and pay them $5.99
per month for every client who hosts SQL Server.
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