From: Gunnar Beushausen Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: Future version of MacOS code named Allegro Date: Tue, 22 Jul 1997 17:11:20 +0200 Organization: Customer of EUnet Germany; Info: info AT Germany DOT EU DOT net Lines: 37 Message-ID: <33D4CD98.CFD2D21F@beushausen.wl.eunet.de> References: <5qpg62$3is$1 AT canopus DOT cc DOT umanitoba DOT ca> <5qv80b$hd1 AT sun3 DOT uni-essen DOT de> <33D37B2E DOT 4825D994 AT execulink DOT com> NNTP-Posting-Host: 149.228.239.3 Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk Jeff Weeks schrieb: > Peter Gerwinski wrote: > > > > Kevin Bagnall (umbagnal AT cc DOT umanitoba DOT ca) wrote: > > > It's like when you meet someone with the same name as yours and > you say "hey!, > > > you have the same name as me, that's so cool, meaningless, but > cool!" > > > > If they make `Allegro' a trademark, this could become a problem. > > The same happened for the `Spinner' WWW daemon which is now called > > `Roxen', and somebody tried (is still trying?) the same for `Linux'. > > I don't think that'll be a problem. It's just a code name right? > Win95 > was code named Chicago... they never used the name, or copyrighted it, > > as far as I know. Same with Copland and all those other code names. > They're just temporary. I don't think that's true! Chicago and Copland are city names. Names for cities, rivers or stars cannot be copyrighted. That's why Chicago was renamed Windows95 or Klamath Pentium II. The name Allegro in fact can be copyrighted. Perhaps it would be better if Shawn would register the name for himself? Although i don't know if it's necessary because Mac Allegro is hardware and Shawn's Allegro is software. I don't know how this is with hard and software, but you may name cookies for example Windows 95 or Pentium and nobody could sue you. -- --- Gunnar Beushausen Gunnar AT hof DOT de http://www.hof.de/~gbasic