On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 13:00:14 -0400 Raul Miller wrote: > What makes this particular point in time significant?
I'm not sure I understand your question... :( It's not time that's significant, it's the operation you are performing. What I'm saying (well, trying to say...) is that you are not adding creative elements by just running the build scripts and/or using makefiles. Perhaps you are substituting some copyiright holders with others in the resulting binary if you link against a different libc implementation (in the "linking creates derivative" assumption): the ones who hold copyright for the replaced libc. But the mere build process is not a creative act, as long as it goes straightforward with no need to modify anything. If you are porting Emacs in order to link it against some strange libc implementation that was not in the mind of Emacs authors, then you possibily have to modify something in the makefiles and/or in the C source files. Then you are performing two operations: modifying (creative act: you add your name among the copyright holders) and building (non-creative). -- | GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 | You're compiling a program Francesco | Key fingerprint = | and, all of a sudden, boom! Poli | C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 | -- from APT HOWTO, | 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4 | version 1.8.0
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