I don't see why congress can't just play rock, paper, scissors to win, our presidential ellection was ended in a rousing game of resign, recount, appeal.
I'd love to play a nice game of Roshambo with Bill Clinton but I think Monnica beat me to it.
I don't quite think Example 2 is completely correct. If the product was aptly named "Foog!" and it was by a company named "Foogiston" (the same company that makes those nifty binders), the original Foogiston, Inc. could argue that Foogiston Systems was abusing the good will of their company name in order to promote their product. I'm sure with the right lawyer I could win a lawsuit if I was the CEO of Foogiston, Inc.
Ads targeted for certain audiences have always been used, but they must have a HUGE database of advertisers if they plan to use your age, sex, AND zipcode. It sounds like a good idea from a marketing perspective, but is it really plausible?
Emulators themselves are not illegal nor is their distribution (unless of course they are retail emulators). The usage of emulators CAN be illegal but is surely not completely illegal. Emulators can be very usefull for developers that are programming for these systems. There is no copyrighted material in the Emulator itself, only in the ROMs it uses. If an Emulator is used for developement purposes is is legal and quite practical I might add. Just my 2 cents =)
I don't see why congress can't just play rock, paper, scissors to win, our presidential ellection was ended in a rousing game of resign, recount, appeal.
I'd love to play a nice game of Roshambo with Bill Clinton but I think Monnica beat me to it.
I don't quite think Example 2 is completely correct. If the product was aptly named "Foog!" and it was by a company named "Foogiston" (the same company that makes those nifty binders), the original Foogiston, Inc. could argue that Foogiston Systems was abusing the good will of their company name in order to promote their product. I'm sure with the right lawyer I could win a lawsuit if I was the CEO of Foogiston, Inc.
Ads targeted for certain audiences have always been used, but they must have a HUGE database of advertisers if they plan to use your age, sex, AND zipcode. It sounds like a good idea from a marketing perspective, but is it really plausible?
This will definitely help those out there with little ram to run some of the cooler KDE apps. Great job.
Emulators themselves are not illegal nor is their distribution (unless of course they are retail emulators). The usage of emulators CAN be illegal but is surely not completely illegal. Emulators can be very usefull for developers that are programming for these systems. There is no copyrighted material in the Emulator itself, only in the ROMs it uses. If an Emulator is used for developement purposes is is legal and quite practical I might add. Just my 2 cents =)