Give away almost 5000 pcs or maybe more.....
With conditions pc must remain on 24/7 , they must pay for Internet service - and allow use of grid computing software.
Does a BSD license or any other OSI license let people keep attribution?
If I showed some Windows IT Folks who never saw / heard RedHat linux a copy of CentOS,
where CentOS replaces all "RedHat" names in their stuff, how would someone know it event mainly came from RedHat, without further research?
Maybe I am thinking that a fork can copy 100% of the code and then release the source as well, the the 1st party would loose the attribution?
Thanks,
Mark
Give away almost 5000 pcs or maybe more.....
With conditions pc must remain on 24/7 , they must pay for Internet service - and allow use of grid computing software.
http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/
cooling cost - almost 0
power cost - almost 0
Mark
for IRC on your blackberry
jmirc
http://jmirc.sourceforge.net/
I think this works ok for my limited use.
for telnet / ssh client on your blackberry midpssh
http://www.xk72.com/midpssh/
Works well, lets you have some macros for commands.
Hope someone new finds these and enjoys them.
Mark
"because people like attribution"
What OSI License lets people keep attribution ?
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/
Does a BSD license or any other OSI license let people keep attribution?
If I showed some Windows IT Folks who never saw / heard RedHat linux a copy of CentOS, where CentOS replaces all "RedHat" names in their stuff, how would someone know it event mainly came from RedHat, without further research?
Maybe I am thinking that a fork can copy 100% of the code and then release the source as well, the the 1st party would loose the attribution?
Thanks,
Mark