Well, actually, Sprint came from Final Word (Mark of the Unicorn) which in
turn came from Emacs, which is still very much alive.

In fact, I continue to use Sprint on an almost daily basis since it will
still do many things my Word 2000 can't handle. It's built in macro language
is wonderful--you can do ANYTHING in it, even write Rebol scripts<g>.

--Ralph


> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
> >OK, then why don't Windows 95/98 users take over the product and
> get it open
> >sourced?  Because the *owner* of a product has to release it to
> open source
> >for that to happen
>
> I think that is an irrelevant comparison.  Win 98 is a current product.
> Sprint died many many years ago.
>
> -------
> Regards,        Graham Chiu
> gchiu<at>compkarori.co.nz
> http://www.compkarori.com/dynamo - The Homebuilt Dynamo
> http://www.compkarori.com/dbase - The dBase bulletin
>

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