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Posts: 320 | Thanked: 137 times | Joined on Apr 2010
#22
Originally Posted by ZogG View Post
Don't jump from side to another. You know what i mean, it's not that we don't have normal working free office - we do have openoffice. As well, i understand that program can cost money, and it's fair enuf, but at lest they can use open standard. For example, i'm linux user, and now because of the college i have to use windows computers at work or computers of my friends just to print some documents ( OO is great but not always display .docs as it should), as well we studing C, but because of Visual Studio they use in college i need something that supports .NET (yes we have mono, but still not the same). So i need not only to buy Microsoft Office or Visual Studio (second the school is giving for free, license for students), but i also need to buy Microsoft Windows itself + use dualboot or virtual machine. i don't have many choices. And it's because some education organizations get the profit from Microsoft, while Microsoft gets the profit from you.
I am afraid your bottom line is absolutely false. No education organizations get any profit from Microsoft unless the one where you are studying does that. These would be considered "side deals" which are strongly against company policies and Microsoft does not get any profit from them. (I have worked at MS yes). They provide upto 90% discount to education sector which varies from region to region.

My point: Developers work extremely hard so try and put aside the image of MS and think about the work that goes into that software. Forget about them being under the MS umbrella. Even most opensource software asks you for donations which is optional of course but still everyone needs the money.