I've been struggling to find OEM software. Either its too expensive or its illegal. I've read other posts and found that anything below 50% of the price is usually illegal. I found a site that offers most of the software for only 20% of the price. I investigated further and found it pretty legit. The guarantee access codes, legality, and a refund if needed. Any thoughts?
It's a Microsoft title and they don't ship the CDs.
I wouldn't mind not having the CD. I could prolly save in the installation to a CD.
Can I make this any clearer?
No CD/DVD's, just downloads.
Serial numbers are usually the same as those that are available from certain sites on the internet.
Where is the site at 20% and looks legit?
Email my profile with the answer
P
Just checked the site.
Almost all of it is NOT OEM.
Filemaker Pro Server does not come as an installed option on a Mac, neither does CS3.
Buyer beware, this is not kosher.
P
I have one more site for you to check if that's alrite. I've been looking at cheapsoftwares.org for a little bit. is is legit?
says that it will be shipping stuff to you.
This is a little better than the first one.
I would reserve judgement on this site, it is still "caveat emptor"
I might risk a smaller piece of software to see if all is genuine or not.
P
what type of checklist should I have to determine wheter or not it is genuine?
If you are not receiving physical media, in the original manufacturers carton, and the price is ridiculously low, then it is probably not a genuine product.
If you are willing to purchase suspected pirate software, with serial numbers that are liable to be removed from the manufactures database or marked as stolen, without reliable, if any, support and with little chance of updating the product, then nothing I say will stop you from doing so.
The final decision is yours but most forums will not be inclined to help you with a pirated version of anything.
P
if i did, i would not go through the trouble of this forum.
I was not suggesting that you were.
P
... if it hasn't been mentioned already, is be a student or know one who isn't actually using a Mac for him/herself (nudge nudge)
All right, so that's not strictly totally legit but that is the best way to take advantage of the humongous discounts available for students for the education versions of most leading software in virtually all major categories. Commercial use is prohibited, but I'm assuming that if your business is anything other than a failure you wouldn't be putting so much effort into buying software a bit cheaper.
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