Fri, 31 Aug 2007

From: JakChat

By Tut Tut
And once you buy the software on discount, your company's name will be in their database for all eternity, and you can bet on some lovely visits from MS people for as long as your co exists.



Fri, 31 Aug 2007

From: JakChat

By KuKuKaChu
more like an attempt to get them hooked on the windows™ interface to prevent them migrating later -- in 5, 10 years -- to open-source operating systems ...



Thu, 30 Aug 2007

From: JakChat

By yourfather
of course, they need more money from developing nations.



Thu, 30 Aug 2007

From: The Jakarta Post

By The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
PT Microsoft Indonesia will sell a Windows software version called Education Innovation Suite at US$3 to Indonesian students, as part of its program to help close the digital gap in the country.

President director of Microsoft Indonesia Tony Chen said Wednesday his company would cooperate with the Education Ministry by allowing it to buy the licenses for distribution to students.

"We will meet the minister to discuss plans," Tony said, adding around 10,000 licenses would be available in the program annually.

The Innovation Suite includes the Windows XP Starter Edition, Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007, Microsoft Math 3.0, Learning Essentials 2.0 for Microsoft Office and Windows Live Mail desktop.

At a meeting in Beijing in April, Microsoft top executive Bill Gates said his company would provide 10,000 licenses per year to students in developing countries.

Corporate affairs director Dradjat Panjawi said the discount sales would allow Indonesian students to gain access to information at a reduced cost, improve awareness of intellectual rights and help curb software piracy.

Microsoft Indonesia has been trying to fight software piracy through educational seminars and by offering special prices for licenses to those working in the education sector.

The company is offering an 80 percent discount to government offices and an 18-25 percent discount to small-medium businesses that purchase the Windows Starter Edition.

Tony said piracy in Indonesia had decreased to 85 percent of the total product sold in 2006 from 87 percent in 2005.

According to a report from the International Data Corporation, Indonesia was the eighth largest country involved in computer software piracy in 2006 after Armenia, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Zimbabwe, Vietnam, Venezuela and Pakistan. (14)