Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 7th May 2008 08:54 UTC, submitted by elsewhere
Qt Yesterday, Trolltech released the final version of Qt 4.4, their graphical toolkit which forms the base for, among a lot of other things, the KDE project. It still features the dual-license model (of course), so proprietary developers can license Qt, while open source developers can get a GPLd version (both GPL 2 as well as 3). Read on for a quick overview of the new features, as well as some findings by Ars Technica.
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RE[5]: The BEST!
by danieldk on Thu 8th May 2008 06:57 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: The BEST!"
danieldk
Member since:
2005-11-18

Qt can also be used in free software as well as proprietary software.


Only if you buy a license for proprietary software.

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RE[6]: The BEST!
by lemur2 on Thu 8th May 2008 10:48 in reply to "RE[5]: The BEST!"
lemur2 Member since:
2007-02-17

"Qt can also be used in free software as well as proprietary software.


Only if you buy a license for proprietary software.
"

Err, no.

Qt can be used in free software without having to buy a license.

If you do buy a license, then Qt can be used for proprietary software as well, not instead of.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 4