> Pehaps he could send it to the Computer History Museum, on the > condition that it not be used until the copyrights expire?
As one of Al Kossow's little minions, I say yes, please. CHM works with IBM and the other computer companies, and they do get commercial software out into the public, usually under some non-commercial license. However, as you can guess, these things take time, especially with a conservative company like IBM. But as we know with software preservation, time is the enemy. CHM and bitsavers can accept interesting old software, and just keep it in the protected archive until some deal is worked out. -- Will ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN
