Roller annoyances.
Good stuff from Mr. Lowem: <a href= "http://freeroller.net/page/lowem/20030718#more_roller_annoyances">Minor Roller anoyances and <a href= "http://freeroller.net/page/lowem/20030718#more_roller_annoyances">More Roller Annoyances. Interested in improving Roller? Join us on the Roller development mailing list. There are lots of little bugs to fix and minor improvements to be made, great for those getting started with server-side Java, but there are probably some deeper architectural issues for those interested in performance and scalability.
Andy is right after all, LGPL is not viral?
Slashdot picked up Andy's <a href= "http://linuxintegrators.com/hl30/blog/general/?permalink=LGPL+clarification.html">LGPL is viral for Java story and provoked a response from the Free Software Foundation (FSF):
<a href= "http://developers.slashdot.org/developers/03/07/17/2257224.shtml"> FSF Executive Director, Brad Kuhn LGPL's S. 6 allows you to make new works that link with the LGPL'ed code, and license them any way you see fit. Only the LGPL'ed code itself must remain Free. Such 'client code' can even be proprietary; it need not be LGPL'ed.
I'm so confused. Is that the final word? He didn't mention Java specifically. He is not a lawyer. I don't think this is going to be the final word for Apache. I'm starting to think that FSF wants this to be a confusing issue.