This licensing thingy is turning many a programmer wary.
There are lotsa people who want to contribute to the open-source community, but the licensing problem is making some of them think twice before they actually contribute any code into any project.
I hope that this NASM licensing fiasco will be solved amicably between the people who are involved, and become a shining example of the maturity of the programmers in the open-source camp.
This licensing thingy is turning many a programmer wary.
There are lotsa people who want to contribute to the open-source community, but the licensing problem is making some of them think twice before they actually contribute any code into any project.
I hope that this NASM licensing fiasco will be solved amicably between the people who are involved, and become a shining example of the maturity of the programmers in the open-source camp.
You said: "I ran some complexity metrics on the NASM source code" So, would you mind telling us _which_ complexity metrics did you run ?! Thank you !