I'm not a linux or unix expert and I can barely program in VB, let alone C, so please forgive me if I inadvertently say something silly.
I'm trying to understand the SCO-IBM case.
From what I gather, SCO is complaining about a shared library.
If I understand correctly, when you write a program you include some libraries with the program, and that these libraries contain "tools" that the program needs in order for it to do the things that you want it to do.
Now, I've read SCO's complaint and leaving aside the fundamentally silly notion that IBM must have stolen code from SCO because it would have been too hard for IBM to figure things out by themselves, SCO is complaining about some sort of library that they apparently feel belongs to THEM.
So... can anybody explain to me what this library they are talking about is, and what it does?
And while you're at it, if you see any misconceptions in my question, it'd be great of you could clear them up.
I'm trying to understand the SCO-IBM case.
From what I gather, SCO is complaining about a shared library.
If I understand correctly, when you write a program you include some libraries with the program, and that these libraries contain "tools" that the program needs in order for it to do the things that you want it to do.
Now, I've read SCO's complaint and leaving aside the fundamentally silly notion that IBM must have stolen code from SCO because it would have been too hard for IBM to figure things out by themselves, SCO is complaining about some sort of library that they apparently feel belongs to THEM.
So... can anybody explain to me what this library they are talking about is, and what it does?
And while you're at it, if you see any misconceptions in my question, it'd be great of you could clear them up.