What do you have against booleans? :) That seems like a sort of "too many notes" comment about Mozart's work, if you can reach far enough to follow the analogy.
-Alan On Fri, Jun 20, 2014 at 3:55 PM, Joachim Baran <joachim.ba...@gmail.com> wrote: > I am sure we can work out the exact predicate later. The issue I raised > was about not using boolean. > > > On 20 June 2014 12:51, Oliver Ruebenacker <cur...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> >> Hello, >> >> >> On Fri, Jun 20, 2014 at 3:44 PM, Joachim Baran <joachim.ba...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> >>> On 20 June 2014 12:41, Oliver Ruebenacker <cur...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Also, makes me wonder why the EBI has not already been contacted and >>>> the license determined? Is that because we didn't have the resources to do >>>> so or because different end users might end up being granted different >>>> licenses? >>>> >>> That is my point exactly! >>> >> >>> Even though the licensing information is not available, there is an >>> indication where to obtain it from (here, in this example, EBI). >>> >> >> Actually, my point is to first answer the question I asked. >> >> If not only you don't know the license, but you also don't know why you >> don't know, it is indeed hard to say anything about the license. >> >> If all you want to say is who grants the license, you might want to >> consider something like: >> >> ex:myData ex:canBeLicensedForEndUseBy ex:EBI >> >> Best, >> Oliver >> >> >> -- >> Oliver Ruebenacker >> Founder at Relomics Consulting <http://www.relomics.com> >> Be always grateful, but never satisfied. >> > >