Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] wrote:
Incorrect. Office 2007 Enterprise Home Use program is a single use license.
Which is way I used "most versions" and "read the EULAs".
P
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]
Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.
ALWAYS post your Outlook version.
How to ask a question:
http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375
After furious head scratching, P asked:
| badgolferman wrote:
|| My company provided a free copy of Microsoft Office 2007 for home use
|| which I installed on my personal laptop. It works fine and gets
|| updates from the MS server. My desktop computer has Microsoft Office
|| 2003. I have decided to swap installations and put the 2007 edition
|| on my desktop instead now and put the 2003 version on the laptop..
||
|| How do I go about performing this feat? I am sure there will be
|| licensing issues when I go to validate the products. I don't want to
|| mess up my current installs unless I know I can make them work
|| properly.
|
| Open any office program and go to Help/About to read the EULAs of each
| version of Office. As most versions allow one install on a desktop and
| another on a laptop, you shouldn't have any licensing problems. In
| fact, if what you really want to do is get rid of 07 (or vice versa),
| you should be able to have 03 or 07 on both machines.
|
| P