I originally wrote my grades program in MS-Access to help community college teachers in the California community colleges keep track of their students' grades and produce reports for the students to know how they are doing in the semester and to submit reports to the school at the end of the semester.
I later discovered many flaws my program's design and in my own skills as a programmer. I want help completing this project and I want to abandon the idea of getting rich selling my program. I would like to put this program "out there" so anybody can modify it and distribute it freely according to the GNU General Public Licence version 2. That way I can get a bunch of help with "my" program without having to worry about somebody taking my countless thousands of hours of work turning it into their own proprietary program. I believe I will lose my proprietary interest in the project, but in return I will benefit many thousands of community college teachers (and whichever other teachers find "my" program useful) and I will help myself get this project completed. I am guessing that by doing this I can safely post larger snippets of code (on an Access newsgroup, for example) without worrying about getting ripped off. Opinions? Do I need to join any organization to do this? Or do I just need to display something like the standard, "This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License . . .etc., etc., etc.," at the top of all my source code and when the program opens? _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
