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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!PHOENIX.CAMBRIDGE.AC.UK!AG129
- Via: UK.AC.CAM.PHX; 26 DEC 92 17:48:40 GMT
- Message-ID: <A6CCD3C373FA9C50@UK.AC.CAMBRIDGE.PHOENIX>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.cdromlan
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 17:48:57 GMT
- Sender: "CDROMLAN@IDBSU - Use of CDROM Products in Lan Environments"
- <CDROMLAN@IDBSU.BITNET>
- From: A Grant <AG129@PHOENIX.CAMBRIDGE.AC.UK>
- Subject: Re: OED/Licensing
- In-Reply-To: -unspecified-
- Lines: 33
-
- > This is silly. Does anybody really buy the suggestion that the mere presence
- > of a systems programmer will force an administration to the moral high road?
- > I thought not. As a techie librarian, I have to second Jennifer's comments
- > about software pricing and question the absurd suggestion that academics are
- > less sensitive to licensing terms than anyone else.
-
- I'm not talking about 'techie librarians', who are career professionals,
- but about Prof. X who buys software from his/her local computer store and
- 'lends' it to Prof. Y and everyone else in their research group. Setting
- up a simple network is getting easier all the time, to the point where it
- can be done by non-techies (see PC Mag Dec. 92 for a review of some simple
- LANs). This is especially true for Apple Macs, where CD-ROMs can be
- networked using Appletalk file sharing, but it's pretty simple for
- peer-to-peer PC LAN solutions as well.
-
- I'd guess that unlike Medline or Books in Print or whatever, many copies of
- the OED (the disc which started this discussion), as well as other
- humanities texts, are bought by individuals rather than libraries. Of
- course, there would be less temptation to break the law if the prices of
- some CDs weren't so high, but this is a temporary effect. Sooner or later
- somebody else will produce an English Dictionary that is just as good as
- the OED, and there will be genuine competition. Until then, if you don't
- need discs, why buy them?
-
- The attitude that any conflicting opinion that happens to come from outside
- the US must be due to national abnormalities is very unconvincing. I suspect
- most people on this list know very little about what goes on in the desktop
- PCs of their university labs, rather than the libraries or computer
- departments.
- --
- Alasdair Grant A.Grant@ucs.cam.ac.uk
- MVS Systems Group / Small Systems Integration Group +44 223 334447
- University Computing Service, Pembroke St., Cambridge CB2 3QG, England
-