To save people reading the whole thing. It is this line:
Supercomputer centers can license AMBER for the non-profit price of $400
and make executable code available to their users from non-profit
organizations. However, for-profit organizations who want to use the
program at supercomputer centers must have signed a separate license
agreement with UCSF.
All the best
Ross
On 7/19/13 2:15 AM, "Hannes Loeffler" <Hannes.Loeffler.stfc.ac.uk> wrote:
>On Fri, 19 Jul 2013 11:02:07 +0200
>Jan-Philip Gehrcke <jgehrcke.googlemail.com> wrote:
>
>> On 19.07.2013 01:32, Jason Swails wrote:
>> >
>> > Many supercomputers have a copy
>> > of Amber, so if you have access to a cluster with Amber installed
>> > you can use it.
>> >
>> > Good luck,
>> > Jason
>> >
>>
>> Would that be in compliance with the Amber license? Is there a rule
>> about how many people may use the same license or how these people
>> must be organized (must they be within one research group?)?
>
>http://ambermd.org/amber12.license.html
>--
>Scanned by iCritical.
>
>_______________________________________________
>AMBER mailing list
>AMBER.ambermd.org
>http://lists.ambermd.org/mailman/listinfo/amber
_______________________________________________
AMBER mailing list
AMBER.ambermd.org
http://lists.ambermd.org/mailman/listinfo/amber
Received on Fri Jul 19 2013 - 06:00:04 PDT