Oops, dual licensing was retracted. It had dual licensing not anymore.
My bad. I have been using blender for a long time and really never
checked back again on that one.


dan

On May 24, 11:40 am, Jason Brower <[email protected]> wrote:
> I certainly didn't know about a commercial licence for Blender.  Could
> you show me the link to that?
> Best Regards,
> Jason Brower
>
> On Mon, 2010-05-24 at 08:06 -0700, greenpoise wrote:
> > by the way, I was referring to the idea of: "To have a [level]
> > Certificate, your campany needs fill some
> > criterias... ".
>
> > Also, have you ever seen blender.org? They have good ideas themselves.
> > One for example is to pay certain amount ($200) if not mistaken if you
> > use blender for commercial purposes.
>
> > Just a thought.
>
> > dan
>
> > On May 24, 10:06 am, greenpoise <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > I think that rather than discriminating and hence giving competitive
> > > advantage to one company over another would defy the purpose of it
> > > all! I dont know what a good admission system would be like but I am
> > > all up for a filter type rather than giving some competitive advantage
> > > to ones more than others, that would be unfair.
>
> > > On May 24, 9:37 am, Leandro - ProfessionalIT <[email protected]>
> > > wrote:
>
> > > > Massimo,
>
> > > >   Despite being a product and not a tool, the business plan of OpenERP
> > > > is very interesting.
> > > >   I think that "Regional/Country Departments" of the Association can
> > > > provide more global visibility to Web2Py.
>
> > > >   IMHO, a business plan to this association can have a "certification
> > > > program" with three levels: bronze, silver and gold, and companies
> > > > like mine for example, offer my services to customers presenting my
> > > > "Web2Py certificate".
>
> > > >   To have a [level] Certificate, your campany needs fill some
> > > > criterias...
>
> > > >   what you think about this idea?
>
> > > > -- Leandro.

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