Variant 3
en.wikipedia.org
i'm just someone who really appreciates BSD and the engineering that goes into it..
i don't know what an OP is
XenForo (the software that's used for FreeBSD Forums) uses the abbreviation OP for a different phrase with a similar meaning: thread starter
A thread is defined by a title, an additional description that may summarize the intended discussion, and an opening or original post (common abbreviation OP, which can also be used to refer to the original poster), which opens whatever dialogue or makes whatever announcement the poster wished.
Ehm. No. It's the other way around.It's more traditional to use the word topic,
A thread (sometimes called a topic) is a collection of posts
A thread (sometimes called a topic)
I doubt that this is directly related to calling a thread a thread or a topic but rather the content of the posts contained within a thread/topic. Posts in a thread can be off-topic ;-) The irony is real in this one.On topic, off-topic, and so on …
Do your part.
… feel free to create a different/dedicated thread/topic …
And then again the problem with this is - what? It's not a bug, it's a feature and maybe the most important one why so many people do love the BSD license!There are many folks (like me) in the community who are concerned that the xBSDs will ultimately be commandeered by 3rd parties and we'll lose the base product. apparently it's a known fact that microsoft took much of the source of the freeBSD tcp/ip stack and used it in windows NT+..
So when you said "GPL products are better, though they're taking a lot of BSD code, so they're not better." it sounds like you're slightly in agreement with me, in that programmers are hijacking bsd code to use in their own projects without having to give back.. I dunno.That it's maintained by a foundation, the code is safe. I'm worried that when someone adds something and slaps a GPL license on it, that an obvious fix may be taken away from BSD's base to use with the original free license. But, there may be many ways to do something, that it may be a worry and a way could always be available. At least the code will be available to use as GPL. I also don't like that it's a one way street, GPL can take in a viral way, but doesn't give back. Some say, GPL products are better, though they're taking a lot of BSD code, so they're not better.
I didn't say it was better. IMO, It depends on what it is. For a game, or well maintained project, GPL can be. Asterisk, Opensource Dos, some messaging programs are just as good whether they are under GPL and being under a BSD license wouldn't make a difference in those product's qualities, except maybe BSD like dependencies would make them better, because they tend to be simpler for function. They already use these benefits of BSD licensed dependencies anyway.Some say, GPL products are better, though they're taking a lot of BSD code, so they're not better.
That's not my way of thinking: the primary reason LibreOffice is better is that much more people have been working on it and constantly improving it, while OpenOffice has been mostly in maintenance mode since the fork. This has little to do with licenses. By the time OpenOffice was ceded by Oracle to Apache, most contributors had already moved to LibreOffice and stayed there. By the way, LibreOffice isn't GPL but MPL.many say LibreOffice is better, but it's only because improvements to Apache OpenOffice can only go one way
I was reading about MPL 2.0, and it's a great license. In my limited ability to think everything out, it may just have what else was desired by many in additions to the Apache License. MPL 2.0 is similar to LGPL, but less restrictive. It's compatible with Apache, LGPL and GPL, unlike MPL 1.1. However, software under previous MPL licenses can be upgraded without permission to MPL 2.0.By the time OpenOffice was ceded by Oracle to Apache, most contributors had already moved to LibreOffice and stayed there. By the way, LibreOffice isn't GPL but MPL.
You've got to look at the history back then: why is there a LibreOffice? Because when Sun was merged by Oracle development on OpenOffice became very, very slow with an uncertain future. So people did that thing which is one of the defining traits of open source: they've forked OpenOffice, started to setup their own project infrastructure around it and never looked back. This is why most developers moved over to that camp.That's not my way of thinking: the primary reason LibreOffice is better is that much more people have been working on it and constantly improving it, while OpenOffice has been mostly in maintenance mode since the fork. This has little to do with licenses. By the time OpenOffice was ceded by Oracle to Apache, most contributors had already moved to LibreOffice and stayed there. By the way, LibreOffice isn't GPL but MPL.