In the Trolltech days, Open Source Qt was GPL-only. And up until Qt 4, the Windows port was Commercial-only. Nokia introduced LGPL and open governance, simply because they were not interested in Qt as a commercial…
It does explicitly state this in the blog: "It also allows us to initiate a dialogue with commercial companies who mostly work with open-source versions of Qt." Open source is free lunch. You pay for it by engaging with…
In the Trolltech days, Open Source Qt was GPL-only. And up until Qt 4, the Windows port was Commercial-only. Nokia introduced LGPL and open governance, simply because they were not interested in Qt as a commercial…
It does explicitly state this in the blog: "It also allows us to initiate a dialogue with commercial companies who mostly work with open-source versions of Qt." Open source is free lunch. You pay for it by engaging with…