I don't know this particular program, but many programs nowdays limit you to the number of downloads you can do.
Some are "single use" meaning only one computer, some allow you 2 computers (ie desktop & laptop) some are 5 or more users.
Somewhere in your "license agreement" documentation it should tell you the number of downloads you can perform with this software.
2007-09-24 12:51:15
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answer #1
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answered by centsless 7
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Depends on which version you bought.
MS Office Home and Student Edition may be installed on 3 devices in the same household. Other than that, Microsoft's information is unclear. Maybe it can be on only 1 computer, or on 1 fixed and 1 portable for use by the same person, or on multiple for use by the same person. You'll have to read the license to be sure.
Note: If anyone answers "you bought it so you own it and can do whatever you want with it", they're wrong. That license agreement (EULA) is a contract. If you violate the contract, ummm, I don't know what happens. But legally, you must follow the contract. Buying software doesn't give you unlimited rights to it.
2007-09-24 19:43:46
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answer #2
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answered by DW 6
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Yes you brought for home and own it so you can use it for all your home computers.
2007-09-24 19:35:16
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answer #3
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answered by Nola 3
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