Microsoft unveils new effort to make its documentation great again ... or does it?

Just one problem: while Microsoft itself uses the term ?open sourced?
I think you will find that Microsoft will make its own definition of the word 'open'. for example for years they have been calling their bulk license purchasing plan the 'Open License' (OLP, OLV, OVS, etc). Their Open is not GPL. They want hobbyists and students to tinker with their products and if you're not making money they wont bother you. for example they give charities and schools dirt cheap pricing because they just want everyone to use their products. Their bottom line is; if you make money off our product we want our cut of that to return to our investors.

For example they give charities and schools dirt cheap pricing because they just want everyone to use their products.
The goal of Microsoft is that the parents buy their school-aged child a computer that has Microsoft Windows and MS-Office. ________________________________ From: wlug-bounces(a)list.waikato.ac.nz <wlug-bounces(a)list.waikato.ac.nz> on behalf of rowan schischka <rowanschischka(a)gmail.com> Sent: Friday, 6 May 2016 12:47 p.m. To: wlug(a)list.waikato.ac.nz Subject: [wlug] Microsoft unveils new effort to make its documentation great again ... or does it?
Just one problem: while Microsoft itself uses the term ?open sourced?
I think you will find that Microsoft will make its own definition of the word 'open'. for example for years they have been calling their bulk license purchasing plan the 'Open License' (OLP, OLV, OVS, etc). Their Open is not GPL. They want hobbyists and students to tinker with their products and if you're not making money they wont bother you. for example they give charities and schools dirt cheap pricing because they just want everyone to use their products. Their bottom line is; if you make money off our product we want our cut of that to return to our investors.

On Fri, 6 May 2016 01:53:55 +0000, Ian Stewart wrote:
The goal of Microsoft is that the parents buy their school-aged child a computer that has Microsoft Windows and MS-Office.
I think there is always a degree of self-deception involved every time somebody clicks “I Agree” on a proprietary EULA. Even those who bother to read it may think it applies to them one way, whereas Microsoft’s opinion might be quite different. E.g. the meaning of “personal/non-commercial/academic-use-only” clauses.
participants (3)
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Ian Stewart
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro
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rowan schischka