That only worls if Bar INC has a monopoly on that product. Otherwise a second company Baz INC prices FOO at $8 to start with. A, B and C buy from Baz INC which make $24. Bar INC sells nothing and goes broke. Baz INC then buys Bar INC for $1 and sells off the remaining stock at $5 each to D and E.
Mildred and Patty Hill copyrighted the Text of "Happy Birthday to You". The music itself is now out of copright. Playing the music (without text) in a situation where some kind of connection with a birthday is implied is also covered by the copyright on the lyrics.
An 8086, a Pentium III 88MHz, and a Cray - each running for a year would be 3 years computing time. That's what they mean. They are saying nothing about the number of calculations performed
but don't forget to add the www.array.org/ubuntu repository for eeepc-specific additions
Ubuntu 8.10 works perfectly on my EEPC912
That only worls if Bar INC has a monopoly on that product. Otherwise a second company Baz INC prices FOO at $8 to start with. A, B and C buy from Baz INC which make $24. Bar INC sells nothing and goes broke. Baz INC then buys Bar INC for $1 and sells off the remaining stock at $5 each to D and E.
It can't be illegal to use the GPL. The question is whether the GPL would be enforceable in this case.
Mildred and Patty Hill copyrighted the Text of "Happy Birthday to You". The music itself is now out of copright. Playing the music (without text) in a situation where some kind of connection with a birthday is implied is also covered by the copyright on the lyrics.
An 8086, a Pentium III 88MHz, and a Cray - each running for a year would be 3 years computing time. That's what they mean. They are saying nothing about the number of calculations performed