Hello Wayne,

I know that abandonware advocates feel they are preserving end-of-life
products in sometimes a gray-market fashion.  Some abandonware ware products
have been officially released as open-source; Borland's Interbase is the
example that comes to mind.

Anything that encourages companies or individual programmers to release any
software into open-source is a good thing, IMHO.  I know that there are
plenty of abandoned open-source projects out there but a common issue is
very little working code.  Any mature commercial code that gets open-sourced
is hopefully a gold mine for seasoned functions that get used somewhere else
very quickly.

Todd Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

-----Original Message-----
From: Wayne Wilson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Since the we can assume that the development costs of word perfect are 
no longer on Corel's books, then by putting WP into this escrow plan 
with sales threshold on it, they would hope to recover some value at 
least equal to what they would get trying to sell the rights to the 
product on the market (which since open office came on the scene, this 
value is probably very low).

If however, one has just developed a product in the traditional 
commercial model  the only ROI comes from the large sales volume (if 
ever) should the product make it up the adoption cycle.  That means if 
you still thought you could make it with this product your sales volume 
would be set very high before you turned open source.  Therefore it 
seems likely to me that this service will act a 'life boat' kind of 
value preservation for products no longer at play in the commercial markets.

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