| I was 17 when VB6 came out, working at a local computer store, and getting into programming but couldn't afford $500 to by the pro edition. One day, I happened to read an article that said they were given a free copy of VB6 to review for the magazine. My 17yo mind was blown! Hundreds of dollars worth of software given away for free? Just for writing an article?! I could do that! Having nothing to lose, I called Microsoft's PR department and requested a copy. Told them I published a newsletter about computers and was based in Queens, NY. Their only question? Where should they send the software lol It was literally that easy. A single phone call with zero verification about me, my newsletter, and my so-called publishing company. And it was Enterprise edition which retailed for over $1,000. For little 17yo me! Naturally, I kept calling for more software. Office, Windows 98/NT, Encarta... you name it. I even started calling other companies and published a single edition of the newsletter, in case anyone asked for a copy but no one ever did. All they wanted to know was where they should send the software. One of my favorite free items was course on VB which came on 6 VHS cassettes. The lessons I learned from those tapes built the foundation of my programming carrier. Of course, older me understands the economics of sending people a few bits of plastic & paper in exchange for press coverage but the joy I felt getting that software in the mail still hasn't left my mind. Good times =D |
About 20 years ago the Microsoft for Startups program included the full MSDN subscription which was ~5 keys for every product they ever made. 5 keys of Windows XP, 5 keys for windows server, 5 keys for 2000, 5 keys for every variant of Office. Very popular at LAN parties and they never did recall any of those keys. Today it seems they just give you developer tools and office, not the OS.