On 18/08/18 21:18, David Kastrup wrote: >> "Undocumented proprietary format" doesn't express the intent which >> > "lock-in" does. As David pointed out, patents can be used to protect >> > a proprietary format, only I don't think that, for example, the exFAT >> > filesystem is, in his words, a "strange case".
> A filesystem is not a file format. What's the difference? As soon as you take the Unix "everything is a file" approach, your filesystem IS a file format. I run VirtualBox - all my filesystems really are files. Etc etc. Once you start digging, it's all a distinction without a difference ... (take a look at file containers, like zip, vorbis (or is it ogg), mp3 and mp4, etc. What IS the difference between a file and a filesystem?) Cheers, Wol _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user