If you're legal, use Open Office
"This copy Linex Legal" is a slogan I use in his day the Junta de Extremadura to promote circulation and that could well be estrapolar to Open Office today. Gloger is gerund, I found this article on UbuntuArte . Take a look that is priceless
"A promotional message from OpenOffice, cites that 35% of software in the world are pirated or illegal, we asked whether our software is legal and clearly described Microsoft's strategy.
"After years of unofficially tolerating piracy as a means of securing control of the market, Microsoft is now conducting an offensive to ensure that copies of their software is legitimate:
* Just buy AssetMetrix, a software company specializing in detecting what programs we have installed in our PCs
* You are using the internet to install detection software copies of MS-Office on users' PCs.
* Throughout the world, the Business Software Alliance is organizing efforts to prosecute those who violate their conditions - for example in the UK offers great financial rewards to any informer who reports to companies that use pirated software.
* Microsoft itself admits that clients have difficulty understanding the complexities of software licensing - it's easy to accidentally break their conditions. "
Note that OpenOffice is a perfectly viable alternative, and further copies are legal and will not cost you money. "
They stop selling licenses for Windows 3.1 and 3.11

Although it may seem incredible, Microsoft continued to sell licenses for Windows 3.x,
both version 3.1 and the 3.11 for workgroups.
Version 3.0 was released in 1990 and until now has kept it in his catalog Redmond maker, although he stopped supporting
end of 2001.
Since 1 November, has also stopped selling new licenses for the system. Virtually abandoned, Windows 3.x was used in some cash registers and in some entertainment systems from various airlines, like Virgin or Qantas.






