PureBasic License

Started by Zaxxan, December 29, 2024, 22:30:43

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Zaxxan

Hi, can anyone confirm if a single user license can be installed on multiple devices? To clarify I would be the user but I use a couple of PC's and laptops, not at the same time though!!
MSI Z77A-GD65, Intel 2500K @ 4.6Ghz, Samsung 32Gb, Samsung 840 Pro 256Gb SSD, Palit 1070 Super Jetstream, Windows 11
Lenova Legion 5 15.6", 16Gb, AMD Ryzen 7 4800H, Nividia RTX2060, Windows 11

Coder Apprentice

#1
PureBasic FAQ: "The PureBasic licence is a user-based licence, which means you can install your full version on all of your computers without the need to buy another licence for each." Yeah, it doesn't need to go online the check the license, once you download the full version from your account, you install it where ever and as many times as you wish.

Zaxxan

MSI Z77A-GD65, Intel 2500K @ 4.6Ghz, Samsung 32Gb, Samsung 840 Pro 256Gb SSD, Palit 1070 Super Jetstream, Windows 11
Lenova Legion 5 15.6", 16Gb, AMD Ryzen 7 4800H, Nividia RTX2060, Windows 11

Pfaber11

#3
Yeah I read that the other day I am pleased I bought it a couple of years ago.
I think PureBasic is a nice piece of software although I was waiting a while for the new graphics renderer,
now it is here I can reevaluate. There are other pluses with PureBasic like .dll creation. I do love AGK Studio
though and I think I could make just about anything with it games or anything else so why bother with PureBasic, I don't know but it feels right.
Windows 11 home edition
PureBasic 6.20 and AppGameKit studio
ASUS Vivo book i5 15 16gb ram 512gb ssd
ASUS Vivo book i3 15 16gb ram 256gb ssd
HP Desktop; AMD 6700 A10 16GB ram 2 GB graphics card windows 10

Shardik

You are not only allowed to install your user-based license on all your computers but you are also allowed to install the different PureBasic versions for Linux, MacOS and Windows on your computers without additional costs.

PureBasic FAQ:
QuotePureBasic currently runs on four different operating systems (Windows, Linux, MacOS X and AmigaOS) and a single licence covers them all.

The Raspberry Pi is even missing in that statement. So you are able to develop cross-platform programs without any additional costs. And any future updates and new versions are free to download (since 1998)!