> The problem is the vagueness of the license.

I would say the problem is the preciseness of the license (given the vagueness 
of the situations it references).

Charles


-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On Behalf 
Of John McKown
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2021 10:09 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: IBM ZDNT Learner's Edition - beware

Which leads to a question.What, exactly is a "development environment"? Is
it an environment in which any code is written? That can't be it or IBM
would not include any compilers or interpreters with ZDNT (why am I
thinking zDENTAL?). Does running a program I wrote (developed) mean it is
now a "test environment"? Or must everything done on ZDNT remain on that
one and only system? I assume that I can move the ZDNT image  to a new
host. Since it is "dongle protected", I know I can't run ZDNT concurrently
on more than one Intel system. What about Linux on VMWare? Or
multiple Linux images on VMWare sharing the dongle? Hum, how about Hyper-V
to run Linux under Windows?

Yes, these are mainly silly questions. The problem is the vagueness of the
license. And I have more questions.  Assuming I can indeed write and run

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