> My question is the following : > > - What are the implications for Py users ?
After reading your message, I had a difficult time getting your point, or even finding out what your question is. So I stick with what you said is your question: What are the implications for Py users ? To this, the answer is mostly: none at all. There may be vague indirect effects (such as more Python software being available on Windows), but I doubt it will be significantly noticeable. > I mean, even if somebody (not me but enterprises & organizations I > work or may work for in the future ;o) decides to use Windows pay for > that and everything else, I'd not like to qualify as a "pirate" (or > alike) for using a Py distribution or app including MS Intelectual > Property (MSIP) (and MS loves MSIP -even if nobody can see it- and all > kind of legal issues, especially with FOSS) nor even have Py in the > middle of a patent dispute or something ... I can't follow here. Why would using a Py distribution or app that includes MSIP qualify you as a "pirate"? And why would Microsoft's making free (as in beer) tools available to Python contributors make you qualify more as a "pirate" than you are currently qualified as? > - What are the implications for other devs (not core ;o) who use to > download sources and try new things, or perhaps use Py code the way > they want to solve an specific issue, or modify it somehow to > experiment or learn something, or whatever ? They can now get tools for free that they previously had to buy. > - Will that affect contributions from «future or potential» devs ? This is an indirect effect; I doubt there is any noticable change (in particular as VS Express is free (as in beer) already). > - Will they also need an MS license to see or compile (or whatever) > the changes contributed by Py devs ? Not more than currently already, no. You may not be aware that Python is *already* compiled by MSVC on Windows. > - What about if for some reason, a idea or impl or alg or snippet (or > whatever) is propagated to GNU/Linux distributions and it's MSIP? > (considering former disputes like «Linux kernel violates 42 of MS > patents») ? Python contributors should always have the copyright to all changes they contribute. They should not contribute code owned by Microsoft, nor should they contribute code owned by anybody else (except themselves). The latter is the bigger problem: sometimes people contribute code that is owned by their employer, without an agreement of the employer. > I apologize in advance if I'm being rude or naïve or * I didn't consider your message rude. It is perhaps naïve (apparently ignoring the status quo), but you don't have to apologize for that. Regards, Martin _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com