Explains how Multiplexing may impact the licensing needs of Microsoft software and online service products. Microsoft Step-up Licenses. Microsoft Unattended License Overview. Microsoft Qualified Devices and Qualified Users. Some Volume Licensing agreements and enrollments provide organization-wide licensing with tiered pricing that can be based on the number of "Qualified Devices. Self-Hosted Applications.
Introduction to Microsoft Core licensing. This brief provides an introduction to Microsoft Per Core licensing models and the Microsoft software products that use them. Downgrade rights. Explains the downgrade rights for the most commonly acquired systems License Terms granted by Volume Licensing programs and how they compare with original equipment manufacturer OEM and full-package product FPP license rights.
Microsoft software license dependency guide. A comprehensive list of Microsoft software licenses and dependent licenses the "software stack" required under the terms of Volume Licensing programs. Licensing Microsoft SharePoint Server. Clarifies the licensing process for Microsoft SharePoint Server and gives some examples of common-use licensing scenarios.
Desktop Windows 11 qualifying operating system requirements. Provides an explanation of Windows 11 qualifying operating system license requirements. Licensing Microsoft Apps in Commercial Licensing. Addresses commonly asked questions about how to license Microsoft Apps through Commercial Licensing. Licensing Microsoft Office software in Commercial Licensing. Covers use rights for Microsoft Office for the Windows operating system acquired as a software product under a desktop application device license typically, a perpetual license.
Perhaps the biggest advantage of the MPSA is that it lets customers buy on-premise and cloud software under a single agreement.
Customers can get cloud and on-premise software today through Enterprise Agreements, which are three-year volume licensing contracts for organizations with or more PCs. Microsoft's EA -- and other licensing plans such as Select Plus and Open -- were built to meet needs of different customers and distribution models, Smith said.
But these agreements weren't built in a "holistic, connected way," which resulted in a lot of duplication. Other members of Microsoft's senior leadership team also are on board. It's a major investment for us," Smith said. Turner has been on a mission to simplify Microsoft's licensing since he joined the company in At Microsoft's partner conference in Denver, he said Microsoft had cut its number of licensing programs from to 26 in the space of the previous year. However, Turner also made it clear that Microsoft would have to keep chipping away at licensing complexity.
This is because Microsoft used simpler language and cut out duplication in the wording of the agreement, Smith said. The MPSA reduces the number of steps needed to complete an agreement by 70 percent, which comes from eliminating manual decisions that used to be required, Smith said.
Customers can save time by consolidating their agreements using the MPSA. Smith said one early beta customer was able to save an entire day out of their week by switching to the MPSA, and he said Microsoft expects other customers to see similar time-savings. Microsoft also studied competitors' licensing agreements when developing the MPSA. Smith said Microsoft was inspired by one rival in the desktop market whose licensing agreement is only 10 pages long.
Microsoft, Redmond, Wash. Insight's clients typically have numerous lines of business, and the MPSA lets them take advantage of volume discounts across their organization, she said.
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