From my POV, when people at OpenMoko decided on GTK for its paltform they
are giving developers the ability to participate and influence *directly* on
its development, and create great apps, both opensource and proprietary,
without paying any license fees. The Nokia decision when build the Maemo
License fees for Qtopia (and Qt) are a pittance compared to the fees of
even one engineer for one year for any company
Yes I agree with you before you said it:
Look that the pricing is not the most importante issue
You can influence directly the development of Qtopia very easily.
It appears more
Marcelo Lira wrote:
From my POV, when people at OpenMoko decided on GTK for its paltform
they are giving developers the ability to participate and influence
*directly* on its development, and create great apps, both opensource
and proprietary, without paying any license fees. The Nokia
Marcelo Lira wrote:
License fees for Qtopia (and Qt) are a pittance compared to the fees of
even one engineer for one year for any company
Yes I agree with you before you said it:
Look that the pricing is not the most importante issue
You can influence directly the development of Qtopia
Very true. An extremely small amount of actual source code, none of it
especially useful, was released with Android. The core libraries, as
well as the Dalvik virtual machine, the tools, etc., were only released
in binary form. The only sources provided were
- the kernel
- WebKit
- the QEMU-based
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