Luciano Resende wrote:
Hey Mike
What are your concerns with regards to license ? Looking at [1], it
looks like the GData Java Client is Apache License 2.
[1] http://code.google.com/p/gdata-java-client/
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 10:01 PM, Mike Edwards
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Douglas Leite wrote:
After analyzing the Google Data API and the code of binding-atom,
binding-atom-abdera, and binding-feed, I propose an approach to start the
development of the GData biding.
I propose creating a new type of binding: biding-gdata. Similarly as
binding-atom-abdera, that extends the binding-atom, this new kind of
binding
would extend the binding-atom too.
The implementation of the invokers (linke GetInvoker, PostInvoker, and
PutInvoker) would be done using the GData Java Client, that provides tools
and an abstract layer, abstracting the necessity of handling with HTTP
requests/responses and XML's processing.
The binding-gdata could extend the binding-rss aiming to allow RSS feeds.
This approach looks like the binding-feed, but reusing the binding-atom
and
binding-rss, and using the GData Java Client to implement the invokers.
What do you think about?
Douglas,
We need to take some care over the idea of using the GData Java Client - we
need to check out the legal terms that apply to the client code, since it
does not appear to have a license that is compatible with the Apache open
source license, as far as I can tell.
I'm not saying that you can't use the Google code, but we do need to ask to
see what the right way would be to use this code.
Yours, Mike.
Luciano,
What about this page, linked off the one above:
http://code.google.com/tos.html
Yours, Mike.