Oh, and implicitly, who they work for of course, as we need to “associate” these accounts with our Microsoft partner account, and keep managing these associations. Which means that all of our developers need to get a Microsoft account, and get forced into providing our “partner” with their first and last names, gender, e-mail and zip code. (Looks like the same sort of license that you’ve got) The “sign in into Visual Studio” which is optional if you’ve got a regular license, isn’t for us. Starting with Visual Studio 2013, these are now treated as 30 day trial licenses. As part of the “partner” deal, we are entitled to 35 Visual Studio licenses. I work for an ISV and long-time Gold Certified Microsoft partner.
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