Timothy Miller wrote:

> I'm not a developer. Is the LC business model is moving away from DIY
> users like me?

Very much the opposite: the Community Edition finally brings all the benefits of a mature, robust xTalk to the masses, allowing the entire world to enjoy the language and its object model at no cost, truly free and open.

To make this viable as a dual-licensed product the GPL is a good choice, but with that choice comes a responsibility to preserve The Four Freedoms: to use a program, to share it, to modify it, and to share your modifications. Those freedoms are inherited by everything that uses a GPL-governed work.

When sharing is your goal the GPL is a great option, and we'll likely see a great many new libraries and tools for educators, hobbyists and other communities spring up from all this.

The only downside is for the edge cases like yours where stack protection was used for purposes beyond keeping code proprietary, but it seems we're on the way to a useful solution here:

> Gotta confess, I know nothing about the encrypt and decrypt
> functions. Never heard of them. Maybe I can get them to work
> -- will look them up.

I think you'll be pleasantly surprised by how easy they are to work with once you get the hang of it. Time well spent considering how powerful they are for providing truly industrial-strength protection.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World
 LiveCode training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
 Webzine for LiveCode developers: http://www.LiveCodeJournal.com
 Follow me on Twitter:  http://twitter.com/FourthWorldSys


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