The copyright code of the United States (title 17 of the U.S. Code) provides for copyright protection in sound recordings. Sound recordings are defined in the law as "works that result from the fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds, but not including the sounds accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work." Common examples include recordings of music, drama, or lectures
therefore no sound, no copyright...
sounds good to me... (no pun intended)
but this post on the otherhand... blatently stolen from their website hmm...
Simplest answer is the most obvious, look at their website, look at websites they've created, and if they've used the languages you want on your website, and have done it well, it stands to reason they are able to do it again.
a few questions come to mind, obviously the technology is fairly new, but is the physical screen stronger than that of a typical LCD? relative to current LCDs how much would it cost? Will it be sluggish at cold temps like LCDs? I'd love to have one of these on my tablet PC currently pretending to be my car radio, with the cold weather the screen reacts quite slow sometimes.
I've noticed this in the past, and one of the other posters hit it right on the nose, time is money, I know I don't have the time to screw around looking for the very best price on things, if Dell (not that I'd ever buy from them:-p) wants to do that looking for me and charge me a few bucks more it is well worth it.
java is a bit more platform independent, but director/shockwave is fairly easy for even those with limited or no programming ability, I wrote a primative stickdeath clone for a college project in about a week.
from http://www.copyright.gov/
What Is a Sound Recording?
The copyright code of the United States (title 17 of the U.S. Code) provides for copyright protection in sound recordings. Sound recordings are defined in the law as "works that result from the fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds, but not including the sounds accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work." Common examples include recordings of music, drama, or lectures
therefore no sound, no copyright...
sounds good to me... (no pun intended)
but this post on the otherhand... blatently stolen from their website hmm...
waiting for the whoppix project to produce a livecd distro I can just pop in...
Simplest answer is the most obvious, look at their website, look at websites they've created, and if they've used the languages you want on your website, and have done it well, it stands to reason they are able to do it again.
a few questions come to mind, obviously the technology is fairly new, but is the physical screen stronger than that of a typical LCD? relative to current LCDs how much would it cost? Will it be sluggish at cold temps like LCDs? I'd love to have one of these on my tablet PC currently pretending to be my car radio, with the cold weather the screen reacts quite slow sometimes.
I've noticed this in the past, and one of the other posters hit it right on the nose, time is money, I know I don't have the time to screw around looking for the very best price on things, if Dell (not that I'd ever buy from them :-p) wants to do that looking for me and charge me a few bucks more it is well worth it.
java is a bit more platform independent, but director/shockwave is fairly easy for even those with limited or no programming ability, I wrote a primative stickdeath clone for a college project in about a week.
start by forwarding all that spam to the fbi...