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The pandemic and economic and political anxiety have peaked the wealthy s interest in panic rooms.
Texas-based Clyde Scott recently built one for $14 million with a bowling alley and indoor pool.
Some luxury bunkers include extra protection like robot security guards or disguised entrances.
A 13,000-square-foot house in the San Jose Valley has a single-lane bowling alley and a swim-in-place indoor pool. It s controlled via fingerprint access, using an app that was developed specifically for the home. The garage is attached and so are the stables the owner s horses, used for stud, are too valuable not to keep close to hand.
The revival of the long-running legal battle between Oracle and third-party software maintenance provider Rimini Street is a reminder of the high stakes for partners when it comes to adhering to software licensing terms, two attorneys unaffiliated with the case told CRN USA.
“The message that MSPs should take home is licensing agreements count,” said Bradley Gross, a US-based attorney. “They matter. The wording is important. The context is important.”
“If you’re selling and reselling from an upstream provider, understand the limits of what that upstream partner is providing,” said Gross, whose clients include software developers, MSPs, business process outsourcers, OEMs and VARs.
Revived Oracle Lawsuit With Rimini Street A ‘Message’ For MSPs: Attorneys
‘If you’re selling and reselling from an upstream provider, understand the limits of what that upstream partner is providing,’ an attorney whose clients include VARs and MSPs told CRN. By Wade Tyler Millward April 15, 2021, 02:12 PM EDT
The revival of the long-running legal battle between Oracle and third-party software maintenance provider Rimini Street is a reminder of the high stakes for partners when it comes to adhering to software licensing terms, two attorneys unaffiliated with the case told CRN.
“The message that MSPs should take home is licensing agreements count,” said Bradley Gross, a Weston, Fla.-based attorney. “They matter. The wording is important. The context is important.”