Just want to let you know: I got many mails from users who like to see harmony continued ( as you may have expected ) - many of them repeated the points already mentioned by many people on the list. I´ll attach a mail which summarized most points - you may want to read it even through there not much new if you followed the discussion. I´d personally like to continue - but without enough man-power there's the danger of fading away :((( ------------------------------------------------------------- I think it is essential that the Harmony project continue to build an LGPL version of the Qt API. The new QPL license of Qt is Open Source, but it carries with it the same problems for a library as does the GPL: contamination of linked applications (note that this is not "contamination" in the sense as used in the Open Source Definition), although more indirectly. When it was found in past years that parts of the standard C libraries of Linux where GPL'd, much effort was expended to ensure that the Linux community would have fully GPL-free system libraries (LGPL, BSD, whatever, but not GPL). This whole issue has since been long forgotten, but it was very important at the time, because with GPL'd libraries, Linux would not have been "free" for use with non-GPL applications, which translates to: troubles with BSD utilities and X, and no xv, Applix, Oracle... Note that the issue here was not that the libraries should be "free" or "Open Source", but that the licensing of the Operating System environment should not affect the licensing of any applications running on top of it: i.e. the freedom of application developers. The Linux community did not want to hamper development of commercial applications for Linux in any way. Similarly, if a QPL'd Qt would ever become a part of the "standard libraries" of Linux, it would no longer be "free" for applications that do not satisfy the QPL requirements. For such (commercial/non-free) applications, Linux would be reduced to a proprietary Operating System licensed by Troll Tech. Note that *users* of such applications would not be affected, but developers would, which makes the problem somewhat less transparent than the problems with the GPL. Developers would be subjected to commercial licensing from a company to be allowed to develop for Linux. Although some "strictly free software" Linux user would probably not care about this, it is contrary to the intentions of the Linux community at large. Thus, the Linux community will probably not allow this to happen, just as it has initiated corrective action with a similar issue in the past. Therefor, if we ever want to see KDE a fully integrated part of the Linux system (not just an add-on on some commercial distributions), it is essential that an LGPL'd (or otherwise more leniently licensed) version of the Qt API be available, or that KDE be rewritten to use another library. I hope this helps provide you with sufficient incentive to continu your project at full speed. Greetings, -- W.F. Konynenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------- bye Joerg