Students
can get software cheap
By
Caroline Limuti
Summer Forty-Niner
Cal State
Long Beach students can rent software that costs hundreds
of dollars such as, Office 2000 Pro and Visual Studio
Pro, for less than $50 at the University Bookstore.
The programs
are available to students and faculty because of a little-known
agreement between Microsoft and Cal State University
called the Microsoft Enterprise Agreement, a four-year,
$8 million deal that provides software licenses for
30,000 faculty and staff and 180,000 students from the
Cal State University system, according to the CSU-Microsoft
Campus Enterprise Agreement Website.
"That
is the importance of the agreement," said CSULB
technology expert, "is that students can get a
number of cheaply priced programs in the bookstore."
Students
already can purchase programs from the University Bookstore
at discounted prices such as $199.95 for Office 2000
Pro, significantly less than they would pay at retail
computer stories which charge between $549.99 and $599.
But $199.95
is considerably more than the $25 administrative charge
to rent Office 2000 Pro. A $25 deposit also is
needed to rent the program, but is refunded when the
CD is returned.
Some of the disadvantages of renting the programs through
the Bookstore, according to Cox, are that one does not
get to keep the CD, does not get an installation manual
and cannot receive help from Microsoft.
"Students
can get modest help from the bookstore, " Cox said.
Another disadvantage
of renting from the bookstore is if the computer the
program is installed on crashes, the $20-$40 administrative
charge has to be paid again to reinstall it.
"But
Microsoft figures it is still cheaper (for the student).
If your computer crashes eight times you break even,"
Gruber said.
When students graduate or leave the university, they
can no longer rent programs from the University Bookstore
but they can keep the programs on their computer until
they want to upgrade or the computer crashes.
"Students
have a better deal because faculty and staff are required
to take it off their hard drive (when they leave the
University), but they have to pay the fee" Cox
said.
Faculty and staff members obtain their programs through
Cox, and are only allowed to have the programs on their
personal computers as long as they work forCSULB. They
do not have to pay for the programs.
Programs available through the University Bookstore
"include Microsoft Office Professional Edition,
Microsoft Visual Studio Professional Edition, Microsoft
FrontPage, Microsoft BackOffice Client Access, and both
Microsoft Windows and Microsoft NT Workstation [upgrades],"
according to the CSU-Microsoft Campus Enterprise Agreement
Website.
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