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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!linus!linus.mitre.org!jcmorris
- From: jcmorris@mwunix.mitre.org (Joe Morris)
- Subject: Re: Do non-Microsoft companies (legally) produce DOS5, Win3.1?
- Message-ID: <jcmorris.716216045@mwunix>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mwunix.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation
- References: <1992Sep11.080627.4288@cco.caltech.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Fri, 11 Sep 1992 12:54:05 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- echuang@cco.caltech.edu (Ernest Y. Chuang) writes:
-
- >I just bought a new computer which came with MS-DOS 5.0 and Win 3.1,
- >but they weren't just preloaded on the hard drive -- they were in
- >shrink-wrapped boxes complete with manual and floppies. What confuses
- >me is that they don't appear to be the genuine Microsoft products.
- > [...]
- >it doesn't seem like they're trying to disguise their origin, but I
- >wouldn't have thought that Microsoft would license anyone else to
- >produce their software.
-
- Assuming that you are located at Cal Tech (per your userid) there
- should be a nearby Microsoft office you can call to check on this,
- but my guess is that the boxes you received are probably legitimate.
- Since Microsoft has been rather enthusiastic about going after pirate
- groups which are illegally copying its products I suspect that they
- would welcome a call from someone actually taking the time to verify
- that their copy was legitimate.
-
- Microsoft has signed agreements with numerous hardware vendors which
- calls for them to bundle MS-DOS and Windows with their systems. (One
- reason for this is to make it less likely that the users will buy
- OS/2: buyers frequently aren't given an option *not* to "purchase"
- the DOS package. Followups on this issue to *.advocacy, please.)
-
- Some vendors just take the shrink-wrapped Microsoft product and throw
- them in the shipping cartons when a system is purchased.
-
- Other vendors (apparently) take the MS files and repackage them in boxes
- with their own logo. The code is identical to what you can buy from
- Microsoft.
-
- And finally, some vendors take the MS-DOS or Windows files and customize
- them to some degree. The biggest vendor to do this is IBM: PC-DOS is
- MS-DOS as modified by IBM. Compaq is another vendor which does this.
-
- The modified DOS files are often enhanced to interface with special features
- of a manufacturer's system. For example, I've got a Toshiba laptop
- with Toshiba's hack of DOS. The special feature in the Toshiba version
- is support for the pop-up hardware control panel and various power-saving
- features, which are unavailable if you are running the generic MS-DOS.
-
- You probably need to check with the manufacturer of the system you
- bought (but didn't identify in your posting) to see if the DOS is
- modified or not, and if your system has critical features which are
- available only with the DOS shipped with it.
-
- I would expect that there would be no legal reason why you couldn't
- sell the unused copies of DOS, but be warned that many of the repackaged
- MS products with OEM logos are actually licensed to the OEM vendor and
- not to the individual user. The effect of this is that the registration
- for the package (as far as Microsoft is concerned) lies with the vendor
- and not with you. Upgrades for the code and technical support may
- be available only from the OEM and not from Microsoft, and there may be
- no way for whoever buys the boxes from you to register it.
-
- (Gateway is an example of this, although many Gateway owners report that
- it offers upgrades at prices *below* what you have to pay for the
- standard Microsoft product...even after street-price discount.)
-
- Joe Morris
-