Thank you Eric,

That is exactly what I was looking for.

  -- michael dykman


On Tue., May 10, 2022, 11:51 Eric Iverson, <[email protected]> wrote:

> The announcement to programing went out on 2011 March 1.
>
> Here is the text:
> We are going to release J Source under GPL version 3 license.
>
> Users will be able to build their own jconsole and J Engine (
> libj.so/libj.dylib/j.dll). In particular, ports to new platforms (e.g.,
> Linux/ARM) will no longer depend on Jsoftware access to development
> systems.
>
> We'll continue to have commercial source licenses that aren't GPL and don't
> have GPL restrictions.
>
> We'll continue to distribute binaries and systems for supported platforms
> that don't have GPL restrictions.
>
> A new forum will be set up for J Source discussions early next week. I'd
> prefer if discussions waited until then and to not clutter the programming
> forum.
>
> The reason for this early announcement is I would like a few hardy souls to
> take an early look at the release package. Be nice to sort out severe
> shortcomings and major embarrassments before general availability.
>
> If you would like to try your hand at building your own J binaries, send me
> an email and I'll reply (though perhaps not until tomorrow).
>
>
> On Tue, May 10, 2022 at 11:35 AM Michael Dykman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Good day one and all,
> >
> > Can anyone remind me in which year the source code for the J engine was
> > first released as open source?
> >
> >   -- michael dykman
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
> >
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
>
----------------------------------------------------------------------
For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm

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