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"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."
I can easily accept being wrong, as everyone is from time to time. My only point was that by owning a Mac you have a license to use the software, so buying a copy of OS X is not in question and is therefore considered an upgrade, since owning a Mac is requisite for using OS X according to Apple. Your discounts and rules are not in question at all, and I do not doubt them. One of the reasons why this case will be good, as it will answer these questions once and for all at a higher level and with much more weight than "Apple says...". 




Member since:
2006-01-14
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.