Hello all, Since ZServer is based on Medusa, does a commercial enterprise have to pay the $200/computer license? Or is ZServer released under a true Open Source license (somehow)? -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Tom Jenkins DevIS (http://www.devis.com) Can the denizens of this group enlighten me about what the advantages of Python are, versus Perl? "python" is more likely to pass unharmed through your spelling checker than "perl". An unknown poster and Fredrik Lundh, 11 Sep 1998
On Fri, Mar 19, 1999 at 04:25:51PM -0500, Tom Jenkins wrote:
Hello all, Since ZServer is based on Medusa, does a commercial enterprise have to pay the $200/computer license? Or is ZServer released under a true Open Source license (somehow)?
I believe the current agreement that Digital Creations has reached with Sam Rushing (the author of Medusa) allows for open-source-style distribution of ZServer so long as it's used with Zope. Paul can probably corret the exact legal situation, but basically DC bought an unlimited license to give it away ... say thank you :-) Chris -- | Christopher Petrilli ``Television is bubble-gum for | petrilli@amber.org the mind.''-Frank Lloyd Wright
On Fri, 19 Mar 1999, Christopher Petrilli wrote:
I believe the current agreement that Digital Creations has reached with Sam Rushing (the author of Medusa) allows for open-source-style distribution of ZServer so long as it's used with Zope. Paul can
AFAIK, ZServer was released (including Medusa) under the same license as the rest of Zope. Which means that all of it is free software, including the medusa code it contains. --- John Eikenberry [jae@kavi.com - http://taos.kavi.com/~jae/] ______________________________________________________________ "A society that will trade a little liberty for a little order will deserve neither and lose both." --B. Franklin
participants (3)
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Christopher Petrilli -
John Eikenberry -
Tom Jenkins