> > Nope. If it's not free, it's not OSI Certified Open Source Software.
> > I'm on the board; you have my personal guarantee that that will
> > remain the case as long as I am.
On Fri, Nov 17, 2000 at 10:43:50PM -0500, Al wrote:
> Don't care. What I care about is what the words mean in an actual
> language. In this case English.
Oh? And what does "OSI Certified Open Source Software" mean in an actual
language, in this case English?
> I do not recognize OSI as a standards body
Sounds like a personal issue. But I'm interested in how you assign
meaning to "OSI Certified Open Source Software" given your refusal
to recognize something that you're willing to talk about.
--
Raul