> I just brought this up, since it was my understanding that if you > want to write a commercial program (ie. not under the GPL), and > link it against cygwin.dll, you've got to pay Cygnus $$$. Not all > that different than the restrictions on Qt, really.
Two questions: (1) in what way is cygwin32.dll different from libc5.so in this regard (since the license for both is the same: GPL) (2) the discussion wasn't writing *comercial* software with anything, but writing *free* software with a pseudo-free package like Qt... so how did we get here? There's *certainly* no problem writing gpl'ed software with cygwin32.dll :-) [I'm not representing Cygnus in this; though I've used and hacked on cygwin32, all of my current Cygnus work [Kerberos in particular] is under an X11-style license, though Federal Regulations make it "difficult" to redistribute...] ps. A friend of mine with whom I've been discussing this says that if we took all the time we've spent flaming about this and actually *wrote some code* we wouldn't have the problem in the first place :-) -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .