On 2003-09-29, Fedor Zuev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sat, 27 Sep 2003, Nathanael Nerode wrote: > >> Fedor Zuev wrote: >>> First, try to answer to several simply questions. >> FYI, these are *my* answers, not necessarily everyone's answers. > >>> 0) Is printed Emacs Manual in bookstore a software or hardware? >> The lump of paper and ink is hardware. Including the various >> splotchesof ink resulting from printing press problems. But the >> 'text of the manual',that abstract entity embodied in the manual, >> is software. > >>> 1) Is Emacs Manual recorded on CD-Audio a software or hardware? >> The bits are software, the lump of plastic is hardware. >> ... >>> 8)Is Debian logo written on [cover of] the same CD-ROM software >>> or hardware? > >> Neither, really, but... The printed cover with its actual copy of >> the logo,possibly with some dirt, etc., is hardware. The logo as >> a copyrightable entity embodied on the cover is software. >> ... > Song written on CDDA is a software, whereas the song written on a > analog magnetic tape (exactly the same object from the > copyright|licensing perspective) is not a software. Right?
I'm not sure how you're deriving this distinction between information-stored-digitally and information-stored-analogly from Nathanael Nerode's answers: to me, his answers seem consistent with the interpretation that all information is "software", independent of its physical manifestation. Perhaps you're mistaking his answers for those in another post? Peace, Dylan