Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 14th Jan 2009 09:54 UTC, submitted by Almar
Qt After Nokia purchsed Trolltech last year, doubts arose about how Nokia would handle the dual licensing model of Qt, the advanced cross-platform toolkit which lies at the base of the KDE Free software desktop. As it turns out, these doubts were unfounded, as Nokia today announced it's going to add the LGPL to Qt's licensing model, starting with Qt 4.5.
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RE: ...
by vivainio on Wed 14th Jan 2009 15:21 UTC in reply to "..."
vivainio
Member since:
2008-12-26

QtSoftware knows that the competence is fiarse, the question is, how will this affect them financially?.

It's not like Nokia (== Qt Software) needs to care about measly license euros.

Reply Parent Score: 5

RE[2]: ...
by Hiev on Wed 14th Jan 2009 15:55 in reply to "RE: ..."
Hiev Member since:
2005-09-27

I know nokia needs no money at the moment, but remember that QtSoftware to make it worthy for Nokia it has to be self sustainable, now if Nokia don't mind and see it like something that will render its fruits in the long run is another story.

Reply Parent Score: 2

RE[3]: ...
by vivainio on Wed 14th Jan 2009 17:26 in reply to "RE[2]: ..."
vivainio Member since:
2008-12-26

I know nokia needs no money at the moment, but remember that QtSoftware to make it worthy for Nokia it has to be self sustainable, now if Nokia don't mind and see it like something that will render its fruits in the long run is another story.

Do you have any idea how big Nokia is?

N has been funding the unprofitable Symbian for years (10 or so?), just to provide a platform for phone SW development. Qt is part of this very same thing, with the difference that it's actually a pretty good toolkit.

This is pretty much a game-changing move.

Reply Parent Score: 4