How to find out the harmon.ie edition and license expiration date if the License tab is missing? And why is it missing in the first place?
If you do not see the license tab it means you are running the Free edition, hence no expiration date.The only license message you can get with the free edition is about exceeding the 15 installations per organization.
Did you purchase harmon.ie Enterprise edition?
---- Jean
Related
I beginner question...
I was wondering, how I could get in contact with Qt devs to get support in case I could not find any answer here or on any other site, forum, etc.
While reading here: https://www.qt.io/qt-support/
Standard Support Granted to all Qt license holders*
Looks like support is available only to people who bought their license, and reading here:
https://www.qt.io/pricing
Looks like their 'cheapest' plan is $302/mo.
This price is for companies or there is a different plan for individual developers?
Suppose I buy this plan, I'll be able to mail the support only for a month, or as now I'm a 'license holder' I'll be able to get support even when the plan finishes?
I believe you cannot buy it for a month, it's prepaid for 1 year in advance. I also think you won't be able to get perpetual support as the license itself is not perpetual, it's a subscription.
Moreover, the cheapest "Qt for Application Development"/"Professional" license only lists "Install support" in its features, not "Standard Support".
The minimal "Qt for Application Development" plan which includes "Standard Support" is $341/mo with 1-year prepayment, which results in $4090 at the very least. I'm not sure what extra charges and taxes apply and whether there are any other limits that come with the license due to export restrictions, sanctions, license agreements or whatnot.
GitHub activity is just empty last month, at least
download links for the latest release 0.10.1 (March, 2019) lead to nowhere
same thing for VirtualBox images - AWS S3 bucket does not exist
My questions are:
Is the project dead?
Is there any open source active project which supersedes Kylo?
According to the post pinned at the top of the Kylo community Google Group, Teradata decided to discontinue Kylo development and support in early 2019 and no new sponsor stepped forward to take over the project
Here is the message posted in the Kylo Google Group:
Google Groups State of Kylo project matt.hutton
Feb 12, 2020 4:18 PM
Posted in group: Kylo Community
Teradata made the decision to discontinue Kylo in early 2019. Teradata
had been the sole sponsor of the open-source project and offered paid
corporate training, consulting services, and enterprise subscriptions
for support. The team was unable to immediately secure a new sponsor
and devs have moved on to other projects.
The last official release of Kylo was March 2019. The downloads of
the RPM and sandbox are no longer available but you may still build
the RPM (or TAR) from maven.
It seems Neo4J High Availability is only available for the Enterprise edition which is paid- is there another alternative to achieve replication without that module? (i.e. without cost). Thanks for any help!
Update:
This answer has changed. Neo4j is now open core, so the Enterprise code is no longer dual-licensed - only the commercial license option remains.
You can find more details here: https://neo4j.com/open-core-and-neo4j/
Original Answer:
Enterprise is available as quid-pro-quo - if you put your code out under an open source license, then you get access to the open source Neo4j Enterprise free of charge. However, if you are closed source, Neo Tech charges a license fee. This fee is determined by your needs and your ability to pay - if you are a small outfit with no venture capital, it's still free, and then the licensing cost increases as your ability to pay back to the development of Neo4j increases.
If your application is open-source as you mention, then you are free to use Neo4j Enterprise without paying for it, simply download it at neo4j.org.
Actually Neo4j Enterprise is free under the open source AGPLv3 license.
Neo4j Inc can't modify the terms and still call it AGPL.
If you use Neo4j Enterprise as a server (like most people do) and communicate with it via its REST API or any of the official BOLT drivers then you never trigger AGPL's copyleft requirements.
In other words - the software that connects to it does not have to be open sourced.
You can download Neo4j Enterprise open source licensed binaries up to version 3.2.x from dist.neo4.org. The links for the windows and unix packages are below. (Replace the version number for specific versions)
http://dist.neo4j.org/neo4j-enterprise-3.2.8-windows.zip
http://dist.neo4j.org/neo4j-enterprise-3.2.8-unix.tar.gz
If you want Neo4j Enterprise 3.3.0 and on under it's free open source license, then you can build them from source like we do for our US government clients, or just grab them from our free distribution site.
Check out the blog post if you want to understand why this has happened.
https://blog.igovsol.com/2017/11/14/Neo4j-330-is-out-but-where-are-the-open-source-enterprise-binaries.html
Can someone share their knowledge about procuring the SDL Tridion licenses in following scenario:
1) Someone wants to take/buy the license for individual purpose - No Organization, No Production websites, No Commercial use - Just for Learning purpose. Is their something called trial license or reciprocal licenses for that sake. Please note the Individual is not an SDL Tridion MVP
2) Someone wants to take/buy the license for Marketing purpose - No Organization, No Commercial Use other than giving demos
3) What is the procedure for an organization to register for being a Partner with SDL Tridion
The only option I know of (as it seems you have discovered) for a free individual research license is to gain SDL Tridion MVP status, or work for an SDL partner who has a partner licenses. Other than that you may need to purchase one.
You will need to contact SDL about this - They are the only ones who can provide you pricing information on SDL Tridion.
http://www.sdl.com/products/tridion/
It is not possible to have an individual license, also not for personal or training use.
When you want to obtain a license for marketing purposes you need to enroll as a partner. You can use the following form to indicate that you want to become one:
http://www.sdl.com/community/partner/partner-programs/tridion-partners/index-tab5.html#10-7785
Often specific POC licenses are issued during sales cycles, but they are specific to the prospect environment.
SDL now makes a free developer license (not for commercial use) available. Details on their community website here:
https://community.sdl.com/solutions/content-management/tridion/tridion-developer/w/wiki/863.sdl-web-licenses
I was looking around to see if there were any language packs available for SDL Tridion CME, but didn't find any. Are there any language packs available and what are the steps for installation? I am currently using Tridion 2011 SP1.
Most of languages are automatically installed, but I believe you may need to license them separately before they show up.
Take a look in your license.xml file to see if you have languages mentioned for the CM product.
There are 6 languages available in the product:
- English
- Dutch
- French
- German
- Spanish
- Japanese
Your license specifies which languages are available to you.
Once you have the license, the language(s) will be available in the User Preferences dialog.
Additional language packs are available but only on demand.
In other words, if you want the CME to be in Klingon, you'll have to pay for it.