| bio | website | abhijitnavale.blogspot.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | India | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 4 months |
| seen | Feb 27 at 3:54 | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
Simple but talented guy!
Help me make it happen for 'Open Source Contribution Through Micro Finance' on Indiegogo.
Take a moment to check it out on Indiegogo and also share it with your friends. All the tools are there. Get perks, make a contribution, or simply follow updates. If enough of us get behind it, we can make 'Open Source Contribution Through Micro Finance' happen!
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/open-source-contribution-through-micro-finance/a1c1/3196928
|
Jan 12 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Jan 12 |
accepted | Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material |
|
Dec 28 |
comment |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material If you are talking about copy pasting one project and building new project on top of that copy pasted code, then I understood you. But then again if my new program is such a new in way that its hard to identify that I have copy pasted the code of old program or not, then what to do? Or in other words how do I come to know that when its considered a copy paste of program cod and when note? The programming language syntax (e.g. int main(void){} ) will not be considered copy. But what about logic? If I use logic of factoring of number in two programs then how to know if its copy paste or not? |
|
Dec 28 |
comment |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material Yes many times I can only write 3-4 original and new articles on same topics. I face a very hard difficulty to write new and original article beyond that 3-4 attempts on the same topic. My imagination just dies. What can I do about this? |
|
Dec 28 |
comment |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material Thanks for the first answer. I was waiting for long time for answer and nobody answered. I was fearing that I had asked a wrong question or asked wrongly. But then you answered. Your answer solved most of my confusion. |
|
Dec 28 |
comment |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material How about this. ASSUME that I made an operating system. I sold its IPR. So I should die now? Because there is nothing left in my life to do? Because after selling the IPR I can not never program any Operating System ever in my life? So what is the use of this waste life now? |
|
Dec 28 |
comment |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written MaterialAs a programmer I must state that you have made an error in your assumption. You can't reuse the code you have 'sold' to your employer/client, if you have sold the material and intellectual rights to the code.=>> Oh! Sad to hear that in my remaining life now I can never program a calculator and sell it. I am feeling terribly sad. What should I do with my programming skills now? |
|
Dec 28 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Dec 27 |
awarded | Student |
|
Dec 26 |
revised |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material edited body |
|
Dec 26 |
revised |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material added 1 characters in body |
|
Dec 26 |
revised |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material deleted 3 characters in body |
|
Dec 26 |
awarded | Editor |
|
Dec 26 |
revised |
Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material added 388 characters in body |
|
Dec 26 |
asked | Intellectual Property Rights & Reuse of the Written Material |