On Mon, 2002-10-21 at 02:53, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > While Streams-C is "completely open" for research or government work, > Gokhale said LANL is still working out licensing for commercial > users. "One of the contributions of this work is that the source code > is completely open," she said. "Anybody can look at it and see how to > do behavioral synthesis. It's very useful as a teaching tool." >
So does this mean the publishing of it is like a software patent trojan horse? IF we look at their code, then rewrite and reapply it, they own our project? John Griessen
