SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Tools and Languages

Bill Gates to visit Waterloo for DreamSpark push

Bill Gates to visit Waterloo for DreamSpark push

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 19 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Microsoft is making Visual Studio, the Expression tools and SQL Server Developer Edition available to any Canadian student with an ISIC card. Info-Tech sizes up the impact on the Java

Although the tools are available for all users, Microsoft expects demand to be greatest among those studying math, engineering, science and technology. In addition to getting access to the developer tools, students will also get a 12-month membership to the XNA Creators Club. This will allow students to build games for the Vista operating system or for Xbox 360, Shapiro said.

DreamSpark is also one way of dealing with software piracy, Goodall said.

“When you look at people using this, students, et cetera, if they want the tools they’re going to get them in a slightly less than legal type of way,” he said. “So another benefit here for Microsoft is the recognition that there probably is a certain degree of black marketing and pirating going on for these kinds of tools already.”

By encouraging students to use the tools without paying for them, Microsoft is driving demand in the future, Goodall said.

“It might provide an avenue to give the tools away to drive demand among businesses, (which is) basically the audience who can afford to buy these and where enforcement activities actually make sense and where people are susceptible to software audits and software raids.”










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1582   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

Related Content

Microsoft to offer voice, video monitoring
Microsoft to offer voice, video monitoringMicrosoft takes on Cisco with the introduction of a new server for network performance monitoring. Why the Redmond firm says this product is better than Cisco's Call Manager 5.0
Borland revives Turbo for developer tools
Borland revives Turbo for developer toolsBorland Software brought back its popular Turbo product moniker last month with the introduction of language-specific developer tools.
Microsoft releases SBS 2003 R2 for small biz
Microsoft releases SBS 2003 R2 for small bizMicrosoft Corp. launched its Windows Small Business Server 2003 release 2 (SBS 2003 R2) integrated software bundle Tuesday. Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's chief executive officer, will talk up the new version of the software during his keynote address at the opening of the vendor's Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Boston Tuesday through Thursday.
Thoughts on Bill Gates eventual "retirement"
we have been hearing for two years about the eventual “retirement” of bill gates in july 2008. at this years ces keynote, supposedly his last, someone created an amusing video about his last day, and there were the inevitable spoofs.the only r
How to Prepare for a Certification Exam
by jason w. eckert exam preparation is widely considered to be a laborious task. when i asked my daughter for her opinion regarding exams, she was very succinct: exams suck. however, the process of getting certified in it can be fun at times and highly educational. even pouring through sample exam questions and configuring software technologies that you haven’t spent mu
Generation Y wants Google and Apple
toronto-based research firm decode released last week the results of a survey of 27,000 university students that revealed a good chunk of them may be interested in heading into the tech field after allbut only for the right company, of course.the study found that two of the top five places to work were tech companies: google and apple. according to decode partner eric meerkamp
blog comments powered by Disqus