On Wed, Mar 22, 2000 at 01:35:06PM -0500, Stephen C. North wrote: > I appreciate the suggestions. > > 0) Please can you point out the AT&T source code released under a > Debian-compliant license. This might eliminate the need for any more > discussion. > (If it refers to Doug Blewett's contributions to the X11 widget sets? I'm > not that > confident I can stretch the precedent to fit our case.)
Does this count? (The copyright file from /usr/doc/sml-nj) It was created from files at ftp://ftp.research.bell-labs.com/dist/smlnj/release/110/. COPYRIGHT: STANDARD ML OF NEW JERSEY COPYRIGHT NOTICE, LICENSE AND DISCLAIMER. Copyright (c) 1989-1998 by Lucent Technologies Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both the copyright notice and this permission notice and warranty disclaimer appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Lucent Technologies, Bell Labs or any Lucent entity not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission. Lucent disclaims all warranties with regard to this software, including all implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. In no event shall Lucent be liable for any special, indirect or consequential damages or any damages whatsoever resulting from loss of use, data or profits, whether in an action of contract, negligence or other tortious action, arising out of or in connection with the use or performance of this software. I believe Lucent Technologies was part of AT&T when SML/NJ was first released under this license. -- David Starner - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Only a nerd would worry about wrong parentheses with square brackets. But that's what mathematicians are. -- Dr. Burchard, math professor at OSU

