OT: Aardman - Robinsons Milk 2005-06-03 - By Alan Jones
Back Free makes no impact on patents. You still can't do it.
In-house well.. They wouldn't be able to prove it broke the patent without getting the code so....
Are you thinking of starting an underground XSI plugin network? ;-) ahh our very own shader-mafia. Trafficing patent breaking goods.
Seriously though - if they were able to prove it broke patent then as far as I'm aware being inhouse makes no difference - it's still breaking the patent. I'm surprized that blender uses cube marching for its metaballs - though perhaps they got patent clearance - though I can't imagine them giving it away for free - regardless of how feeble the concept is.
Cheers,
Alan.
On 6/3/05, Schoenberger <XSI@(protected)> wrote: > > |> I wish... > |> that the fast stable fluids wouldn't have a patent :-) > > > That drives me to anther question about patents. > Anbody knows a bit about the conditions about US patents? > If someone re-creates the same fluids (in-house development) and uses them in production, is it allowed? > > Or an even more advanced interesting question: > If someone creates the same fluids and shares them for free (perhaps open source), no selling, is that allowed? > > > > Holger Sch�nberger > technical director > The day has 24 hours, if that does not suffice, I will take the night > > > > --- > Unsubscribe? Mail Majordomo@(protected) with the following text in body: > unsubscribe xsi >
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