Thank you all for your input, I really appreciate it.
Somebody said that I would be fine (when using GPL-licensed stuff) as
long as I provide the sources to people who use the application. I guess
providing the source within the company is not a problem, however I
thought it would be easier to
At 2004-01-13T19:26:34Z, Ph. Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Somebody said that I would be fine (when using GPL-licensed stuff) as long
as I provide the sources to people who use the application. I guess
providing the source within the company is not a problem...
No. Again, no. An entity
On Mon, Jan 12, 2004 at 11:45:25AM +0100, Philip Schulz wrote:
Hello!
Let me apologize for asking an offtopic question. If you feel offended,
please ignore this eMail.
I'm currently working on a program which will be used in a closed company
environment. The programm is written in C.
Philip Schulz wrote on Monday January 12, 2004:
I'm currently working on a program which will be used in a closed
company
environment. The programm is written in C. For this program, I need to
find
a
way of parsing a configuration file. I found a library which can do
exactly
what I need,
At 2004-01-12T11:21:02Z, Rob [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
As far as I understand it, the main requirement of the GPL is that you
make the source available to the same people that use the binaries. So if
your program was never released outside the company, an internal FTP
server hosting the
On Jan 12, 2004, at 5:45 AM, Philip Schulz wrote:
I'm currently working on a program which will be used in a closed
company
environment. The programm is written in C. For this program, I need to
find
a way of parsing a configuration file. I found a library which can do
exactly what I need,