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"i have bougth some mac's from the university without a osx licencse becus they have some separate deal with uppgrades and such. And since i got this mac without a licensce there would then be no legal way for me to run osX since i only can buy uppgrade licences. I dont think so i serisuly doubt that
a apple store would deny me to buy osx for that mac."
Actually, as long as you have a Mac, you are licensed to run OS X. The Mac hardware is what gives you the license to use OS X. This is where Apple differs from Microsoft for an example, as Apple is a hardware company first and foremost, where Microsoft is a software company.
You're wrong. I work at a university and we get a special deal on our OS licenses from Apple. As a result, we can NOT pass them on when we sell off old equipment. The machines are sold with a blank drive. As such, buyers are buying a full retail version of the OS, not an upgrade version.





Member since:
2005-10-15
oh but is it really a uppgrade. i have bougth some mac's from the university without a osx licencse becus they have some separate deal with uppgrades and such. And since i got this mac without a licensce there would then be no legal way for me to run osX since i only can buy uppgrade licences. I dont think so i serisuly doubt that
a apple store would deny me to buy osx for that mac.
If they dont deny me then it is a retail version and if they do deny me it's an uppgrade