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== Legal workarounds == When the legal system places an obstacle in the form of a restriction or requirement, the law may provide a possible workaround. Laws intended to tap into what may seem to be deep pockets may lead to what are at least temporary solutions such as: * Since "most French workplace laws affect businesses with 50 or more employees... many French companies opt to employ only 49 people in avoidance of crippling legislations."<ref>{{cite book |title=Thinking Tech: Thoughts On the Key Technological Trends of Our Times |url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1483595900 |isbn=978-1483595900 |author=Anurag Harsh |date=2017}}</ref> * An injunction against [[Microsoft]] regarding XML features and an ''easy technical workaround'', a patent attorney suggested having two versions of MS Word, one with and one without the feature.<ref>{{cite web|title='Easy workaround' could solve Microsoft Word's legal woes, says expert|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/urnidgns852573c40069388000257612003e86b7/easy-workaround-could-solve-microsoft-words-legal-woes-says-expert-idUS265507465920090814 |website=reuters.com |date=August 14, 2009}}</ref> === Acronyms === Some well-known acronyms were created to work around bureaucratic or contracting restrictions: * [[Programmed Data Processor|PDP]] - The term was used to describe a computer by another name, due to contracting complications for purchasing or leasing computers. The term PDP (Programmed Data Processor or Programmable Data Processor) was a workaround.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19860004398.pdf |title=VAS Demonstration |website=nasa.gov|date=October 1985 |last1=Montgomery |first1=H. E. |last2=Uccellini |first2=L. W. }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |website=harvard.edu|url=http://www.innovation.seas.harvard.edu/files/Disruptive_technology.ppt|title=New Market Disruption: The DEC Programmable Data Processor}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Computers in Analytical Chemistry |page=153 |url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1483285626 |isbn=978-1483285627 |author=R Belcher |date=2013|publisher=Elsevier }} "The term PDP is an acronym for Programmable Data Processor ... the series was introduced by their manufacturer, Digital Equipment Corporation ..."</ref><ref name=DEC_Hist>{{cite web |url=https://digital.com/about/dec |title=The History of Digital Equipment Corporation}}</ref> The name "PDP" intentionally avoids the use of the term "computer".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Henderson |first1=edited by Rebecca M.|last2=Newell|first2=Richard G.|title=Accelerating energy innovation : insights from multiple sectors|date=2011 |publisher=University of Chicago Press|location=Chicago|isbn=978-0226326832|page=180}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Huang |first1=Han-Way|title=The atmel AVR microcontroller : MEGA and XMEGA in assembly and C|date=2014 |publisher=Delmar Cengage Learning|location=Australia ; United Kingdom|isbn=978-1133607298|page=4}}</ref> PDPs were aimed at a market that could not afford larger computers. * [[GNU Project|GNU]] - '''G'''NU's '''N'''ot '''U'''NIX. As AT&T's prices for academic licensing and use of [[UNIX]] increased,<ref name=OLD>{{cite web |title=Old licenses and prices |url=https://www.bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/licenses.html}}</ref> new restrictions on maximum number of concurrent users and limitations on types of use<ref name=OLD/><ref>restricting " universities that wanted to use the system for their internal business (e.g. student registration) as distinct from teaching and research</ref> created a motivation for an alternative: a work-alike workaround. Among the better known ones are: ** [[Linux]] ** [[BSD]] ** [[System V]] * [[Personal Sound Amplification Products|PSAP]]. By contrast with [[Hearing aid|hearing aids]], the sale of which is more regulated<ref>Since a licensed [[audiologist]] is required</ref><ref>{{cite news |newspaper=Wall Street Journal |author=Neil DiSarno |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/pros-and-cons-of-inexpensive-hearing-aids-called-psaps-1403470481 |title=Pros and Cons of Inexpensive Hearing Aids Called PSAPs|date=22 June 2014 }}</ref> and more expensive,<ref>{{cite web |author=Kochkin, Sergei, Ph.D. |url=http://www.betterhearing.org/pdfs/PSAP_study.pdf |title=MarkeTrak VIII: Utilization of PSAPs and Direct-Mail Hearing Aids by People with Hearing Impairment}}</ref> a '''P'''ersonal '''S'''ound '''A'''mplification '''P'''roduct (PSAP) is lower in price albeit more limited in capability.
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