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Microsoft Gives Software to Students
Feb 20th, 2008
Microsoft announced this week that it will give
students free access to some of its most expensive products in a bid
to challenge the rise in popularity of open source solutions. Via a
program called Microsoft DreamSpark, the company will allow millions
of students around the world to download such developer-oriented
products as Visual Studio 2008 Professional Edition, Expression
Studio, and XNA Game Studio 2.0, for free. It will also provide
students with free versions of SQL Server 2005 Developer Edition and
Windows Server 2008 Standard Edition.
"We want to do everything we can to equip a new generation of
technology leaders with the knowledge and tools they need to harness
the magic of software to improve lives, solve problems and catalyze
economic growth," said Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. "Microsoft
DreamSpark provides professional-level tools that we hope will
inspire students to explore the power of software and encourage them
to forge the next wave of software-driven breakthroughs."
Microsoft DreamSpark is aimed at high school- and college-level
students whose studies involve, in some way, technology, design,
math, science, or engineering. It's currently available to over 35
million college students in Belgium, China, Finland, France,
Germany, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK, and the US, and
Microsoft says it will "broadly" expand the program around the globe
and could ultimately reach 1 billion students. |
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