I tend to agree with you, I only mentioned as that was what I recalled. Thanks for your thoughts. As, I think we all acknowledge the Xywrite is abandonware, it would have been nice if they would have put the source out, in an open source format, onok at it and see it. I'm pretty sure the original bitmap programs for Apple/MS, have done this as well. Just a thought! Russ ly@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: it from Anne from NB long ago. It is well known that she monitors this list. Because we have not, it is clear that they only licensed but did notrt of license fee, but that is merely a guess. We have been extremely public about treating xywrite as abandonware for well over a decade now, and nothas long, long, long since run out. At this point, there is no possibility of a legal challenge. On Wed, 8 Apr 2026 at 18:35, russurquhart1@xxxxxxxxxxx <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: I remember those conversations way back. I had a question, I seem to recallne for NB. If that is so, is their any potential liability there of reverseThanks, Russ ly@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: write was abandonware, and we determined that it was. Anybody with an interest in disputing that was contacted and did not respond. Years have passed.� On Wed, 8 Apr 2026 at 17:40, Harry Binswanger <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> I'm not a lawyer, but 40 years ago I dated one while she was in law school, so my opinion carries a lot of weight. Xy is abandonware. We can take "adverse possession" and after a time we will own it. Now, NB is not in that category. It's code is very much theirs. Carl, I believe you have even better legal training than I. Regards, Harry Binswanger At 01:20 PM 4/7/2026, you wrote: >> >>and will keep pushing ahead. I may extend the work further, but so >>far I&rsquom honestly disappointed by the limited response and lack >>of resources, information, etc. I requested. > >and not accusatory annoyance. > > >knowledge to pitch it at Xyghost&rsquos level. I can&rsquot begin to >understand most of what s/he reports. > > >on a non-standard Hyperion computer in 1983(?). If any of us are >programming these days, it is probably with a relatively high level program. > > >around. I can only cheer from the sidelines. > > >issue unless the modified code were used for economic benefit. If I >paid for Xy 4.x, and someone produces an improved version, whoever >holds the copyright is not being economically impacted by my use of >the modified version. > > >to market a Xy 5.x, but after all these years this seems unlikely. > >Myron (Gochnauer) >